Members of Congress from both parties urge tough sanctions on Russia

U.S. Sen. Rob Portman

By JENNIFER SHUTTARIANA FIGUEROA AND JACOB FISCHLER

States Newsroom

WASHINGTON — Both Democrats and Republicans in Congress on Tuesday called on President Joe Biden to impose severe sanctions on Russia after the country declared a broad section of eastern Ukraine independent before sending troops into the region.

Members of Congress appear unified, for the moment, that the most the United States should do is restrict Russia’s economy, not send U.S. soldiers to face Russian troops in the streets of Ukraine. Leaders also began discussing emergency supplemental funding that would allow the U.S. to financially penalize Russian oligarchs.

[RELATED: Latta supports sanctions on Russia, urges tougher action]

New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Russian President Vladimir Putin declaring Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics independent was “an act of unprovoked aggression and a brazen violation of international law.”

“Despite repeated efforts to open the door to diplomacy, Vladimir Putin has chosen the path of conflict,” Menendez said, while calling for the U.S. and European countries to impose “crushing sanctions.”

The panel’s ranking Republican, Jim Risch of Idaho, said in a statement Russia’s actions “are tantamount to an invasion.”

“The U.S. and our allies must immediately implement harsh sanctions that Putin cannot ignore,” he said.

Risch’s statement also included an appeal to pass a bill imposing sanctions on Russia and providing more assistance to Ukraine.

Biden on Monday issued sanctions on new investment, trade and finance in the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic — the two separatist regions Putin declared independent earlier in the day.

Biden announced additional sanctions against Russia on Tuesday after that country’s legislature gave Putin authority to send military forces outside the country. Those sanctions will hit two Russian financial institutions, Russian sovereign debt and Russian elites and their families.

Biden also said that he had authorized moving U.S. forces and equipment already in Europe to Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — all of which are members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

Speaking from the East Room of the White House, Biden said he believes “Russia is poised to go much further and launch a massive military attack against Ukraine.” If that happens, the administration will impose more sanctions on Russia, he said.

Emergency meeting 

With Congress on recess, some lawmakers who are leaders on foreign affairs are in Europe and issued statements from there.

Rep. Brendan Boyle, a Pennsylvania Democrat who represents a large population of Ukrainian-Americans in his district, is leading an emergency meeting of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in Brussels.

“The West must enact severe sanctions on the Russian regime, including on Putin and the oligarchs personally,” he wrote on Twitter. “It’s time to freeze their assets.”

Co-chairs of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus — Pennsylvania Republican Brian Fitzpatrick, Maryland Republican Andy Harris, Ohio Democrat Marcy Kaptur and Illinois Democrat Mike Quigley —  called for increasing military and economic support for Ukraine as well as imposing “robust” sanctions against Russian oligarchs.

“Ukraine’s security and its ability to exercise self-determination cannot be contingent upon Russian assent — they must be guaranteed,” they said in a statement. “By strengthening Ukraine’s position, demonstrating a unified global coalition, and forcing Putin to grasp the consequences Russia will suffer — the world may avert the breakout of war the likes of which it has not seen in nearly a century.”

Sen. Rob Portman, an Ohio Republican who co-chairs the Senate Ukraine Caucus, said the U.S. did not go far enough when Russia invaded Crimea eight years ago, and urged Biden to take stronger action.

“I encourage the Biden administration to impose devastating sanctions now as a means to deter further Russian military operations against our ally Ukraine,” he said.

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the State-Foreign Operations Appropriations subcommittee, said he’s working with Democratic senators to put together an emergency spending bill that would allow the Defense, Justice, State and Treasury departments to “go after the oligarchs who enrich themselves from Putin’s misadventures.”

“It’s now time for that crowd to lose their yachts, lose their luxury apartments, and to pay a price for being part of a thuggish group — a nation-state that really is a mafia-state,” Graham said.

The chair of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Europe, Energy, the Environment, and Cyber, Democrat Bill Keating of Massachusetts, and the ranking member, Fitzpatrick, issued a joint statement condemning Putin for invading Ukraine and calling on Congress to “work to punish these actions and make any further escalation extremely painful to the Kremlin.”

“At this moment, we stand in support of swift, severe, and damaging sanctions on all those involved in (the) destructive decision to further invade Ukraine in an attempt to solidify Russia’s illegal occupation of the Donbass,” they wrote.

U.S. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, a New Hampshire Democrat who leads the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Europe, said Putin’s incursion into the separatist regions was an “illegal annexation.”

The move “must be met with fierce condemnation from the global community and a response that sends the message, without equivocation, that NATO, the West and democracies around the world will not sit by while Putin wages war on Ukraine,” Shaheen said. “The administration should utilize the tools at its disposal and levy severe sanctions today.”

Shaheen issued her statement from Poland, where she traveled following an international security conference in Germany, to discuss the role NATO members should play in the conflict.

Colorado Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet, who sits on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said that the president should coordinate with allied countries immediately, as well as continue to place sanctions on Russia.

“Putin’s egregious rejection of Ukrainian sovereignty violates international law,” he said in a statement. “We must hold Putin accountable for his aggression and stand with the Ukrainian people’s desire for an independent and democratic nation.”

Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly called for “significant sanctions against Putin, his backers, and the Russian government for this incursion.”

Kelly, a member of the Armed Services Committee, said he “will continue to support providing Ukraine with weapons and equipment to defend themselves against further Russian invasion, and will continue working with my colleagues and this administration to defend Ukrainian sovereignty.”

GOP criticizes Biden

But some Republicans attacked Biden for showing “weakness.”

Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Europe, said in a news release that Biden’s moves to cancel the Keystone XL pipeline, withdraw from Afghanistan and to increase government spending showed weakness to the rest of the world.

“All these actions have weakened America, and our enemies have noticed,” he said. “They are taking advantage of the Biden administration’s weakness.”

A handful of House Republicans — led by Leader Kevin McCarthy — criticized Biden for not doing more to punish Putin.

“Vladimir Putin’s decision to launch a renewed invasion of Ukraine is reprehensible,” McCarthy tweeted shortly after Biden’s remarks. “Sadly, President Biden consistently chose appeasement, and his tough talk on Russia was never followed by strong action.”

“This is just another failed line in the sand on President Biden’s part,” tweeted Rep. Mark Green, a Tennessee Republican who is the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs panel on Europe.

In other tweets, Green said Biden should use sanctions to “cripple the heart of Russia’s economy.”

“Joe Biden sure knows how to project weakness at a time that demands strength,” North Carolina Republican Virginia Foxx tweeted.

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Also from Ohio Capital Journal:

Congressional, legislative redistricting on tap for commission

The newest congressional redistricting effort will have to share the stage as the Ohio Redistricting Commission meets with legislative districts still up in the air, with their next meeting scheduled for 4 p.m. Wednesday.

The Ohio Redistricting Commission met on Tuesday afternoon for about ten minutes to start a new congressional redistricting plan after its previous effort was shot down by the Ohio Supreme Court.

In those ten minutes, ORC co-chair House Speaker Bob Cupp set the expectation of two more congressional redistricting hearings, and fellow co-chair state Sen. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron, invited organizations and individuals who have previously submitted complete district plans to resubmit them and present them this week.

As the congressional process began, Gov. Mike DeWine interrupted to reemphasize the currently missing legislative districts.

“This is, I think a question of following the law, the rule of law, respect for the law,” DeWine said. “And I, again, want to state that that’s where we should head.”

DeWine voted in favor of the last two redistricting maps, despite saying he wished negotiations had continued in an attempt to come to bipartisan agreement. READ MORE