US House Speaker Mike Johnson’s Ukraine and Israel aid plan spurs new ousting threat

“I am not resigning,” Johnson retorted, brushing aside the threat in comments to reporters. “I am not concerned about this. I am doing my job.”

US congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene speaks to reporters outside the US Capitol Building in March. Photo: TNS

Johnson just received a vote on confidence Friday from the Republican party’s dominant figure, former US president Donald Trump, who offered a public show of support in a joint appearance at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida. Trump criticised threats of ousting the speaker as “unfortunate”.

Greene, a Georgia Republican, said on Monday night she has not decided whether to proceed with an overthrow attempt.

It only takes a simple majority of House members present and voting to remove a speaker. Because of recent departures from the House – and a razor-thin majority – just three Republicans joining unified Democrats could oust Johnson.

“A small majority makes it very difficult to govern but there’s not anything you can do,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said of the ousting threat.

House speaker pushes towards vote on US aid for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan

Moderate Republicans emerging from the party meeting on Tuesday condemned Massie’s move while several hardliners in the Freedom Caucus said they would not join the ousting effort.

“I wouldn’t put the country through that,” ultraconservative Ralph Norman said.

The fractious Republican majority plunged into a bitter, weeks-long succession battle in October after a rump group deposed Johnson’s predecessor, Kevin McCarthy.

At least one Democrat, Jared Moskowitz, said on Tuesday that he would vote to protect Johnson.

“Massie wants the world to burn,” Moskowitz said on X, the social media platform. “I won’t stand by and watch. I have a bucket of water.”

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World leaders call for de-escalation after Iran launches air attack on Israel

World leaders call for de-escalation after Iran launches air attack on Israel

Johnson announced plans late on Monday to hold separate votes this week on new aid to Israel and Ukraine, in an attempt to assemble fragile coalitions to speed weaponry to both besieged allies.

The move could end a months-long Republican blockade on help for Kyiv while also responding quickly to Iran’s missile and drone attack in Israel over the weekend.

Johnson and Scalise said they were weighing adding border security to the mix of foreign aid bills given the demands by members of the conference.

Democratic leaders would not say on Tuesday whether they would rescue Johnson from an overthrow. They said they are fighting to make sure the Johnson plan has all the funding in the Senate-passed bill, including humanitarian aid.

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