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Zelenskyy asks Congress for more aid. This time, it’s a tougher sell.

Nine months after he got a standing ovation before a joint session of Congress, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy returned today – under notably different circumstances – to make a pitch for more U.S. aid.

Aware that America’s enthusiasm for the war effort had eroded significantly, President Zelenskyy said Ukraine was making progress and using U.S. aid effectively, but that further support was necessary to protect the global world order.

Why We Wrote This

The Ukrainian president’s U.S. visit comes as Congress heads toward a possible shutdown and 55% of Americans oppose additional aid to Ukraine.

A strong bipartisan contingent of senators, along with President Joe Biden, agrees with him. If Russian President Vladimir Putin wins in Ukraine, they argue, his next target will be a NATO member – which America is treaty-bound to protect. That could draw U.S. forces into a direct conflict with Russia.

But the timing couldn’t have been worse. With funding for the U.S. government set to run out Sept. 30, Congress is locked in a stalemate over spending – and appears to be heading for a shutdown. Lawmakers, mostly on the GOP side, are balking at spending taxpayer dollars on a country that, 19 months into the fighting, lacks a clear path to victory and has a notorious history of corruption.

“I just don’t have much confidence that our money is being well spent,” says GOP Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas.

Nine months after he got a standing ovation before a joint session of Congress, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy returned today – under notably different circumstances – to make a pitch for more U.S. aid. 

Aware that America’s enthusiasm for supporting the war effort had eroded significantly, President Zelenskyy urged the U.S. to stay the course. According to senators who attended the closed-door briefing, he said Ukraine was making progress and using U.S. aid effectively, but that further support was necessary to protect the global world order.

Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut, a Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, summed up Mr. Zelenskyy’s argument as: “We have lived up to our end of the bargain, and we hope you see that and don’t choose this inflection point to abandon us.”

Why We Wrote This

The Ukrainian president’s U.S. visit comes as Congress heads toward a possible shutdown and 55% of Americans oppose additional aid to Ukraine.

A strong bipartisan contingent of senators, along with President Joe Biden, agree with the Ukrainian leader. If the U.S. doesn’t help Ukraine against Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion, they argue, his next target will likely be a member of NATO – which America is treaty-bound to protect. And that could draw U.S. forces into a direct conflict with Russia. 

“It’s really pay now – or pay a lot more later to stop Putin,” says Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, who sits on the Armed Services Committee and has visited Ukraine four times.

But the timing couldn’t have been worse for President Zelenskyy’s in-person request. With funding for the U.S. government set to run out Sept. 30, Congress is locked in a stalemate over spending – and appears headed for a government shutdown. Amid ballooning deficits and record-high national debt, Republicans are scrutinizing every dollar in proposed budgets for domestic priorities. And more lawmakers, mostly on the GOP side, are balking at spending taxpayer dollars on a country that, 19 months into the fighting, lacks a clear path to victory and has a notorious history of corruption.

Mariam Zuhaib/AP

Republican Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas says he can’t support any more aid for Ukraine while the U.S. border remains unsecured. “Until we have a plan to secure the southern border, you can count me out for any more funding for Ukraine.”

Mr. Zelenskyy’s firing of all six of Ukraine’s deputy defense ministers shortly before his visit, after sacking the defense minister himself earlier this year, was broadly seen as an effort to clean house.

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