WASHINGTON–U.S Senator Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a member of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on Tuesday spoke on the U.S. Senate floor in opposition to a Senate Republican effort that would abandon Ukraine, eliminate all humanitarian aid to Gaza, and protect billionaire tax cheats by cutting funding for the IRS.

On Republicans’ plan to tie aid to Israel to a giveaway for ultra-rich tax cheats: “I don't think you can ignore the fact that a large swath of the Republican Party is using this crisis in Israel in order to deliver yet another gift to the very small slice of Americans who don't need any more gifts. There are 700 billionaires in this country who have more net worth than 50% of all Americans. The rules are already rigged in favor of the super wealthy. And so the idea that we would facilitate a plan in the House of Representatives to use Israel aid as a means to continue to rig the rules in favor of those ultra-rich Americans is just incredibly distasteful. And it's a signal about where the Republican Party priorities are today.”

Murphy pushed back on Republicans’ fatalistic view of the war in Ukraine and the United States’ ability to help:  “America's greatness is connected to our willingness to stand up and lead in moments of crisis. And this is a unique moment of crisis without precedent, which is why it requires the United States to stand against Russia's aggression. Listen, for thousands of years, we know this because you read about it in your history books growing up, for thousands of years prior to the establishment of the post-World-War II order, this world was defined by state-on-state, civilization-on-civilization violence and conflict. People labored under the constant threat that their entire world would be ended by another one of these civilization-on-civilization conflicts.”

“We live in a very different era today, where we frankly have to be more, not less worried, not permissive and fatalistic about the consequences of re-entering a world and a paradigm in which states enter into conflict against other states. Why? Because we now live in a world filled with weapons of mass destruction. Not just nuclear weapons, but other highly sophisticated weapons,” Murphy added. “And so now, this kind of conflict that Russia and Ukraine are engaged in, that's the kind of conflict that can wipe out millions in a day. That's why the United States of America has stood up for the post-World War II order. That's why we have fought and sometimes died to maintain it. And this is the most significant affront to that order. An order that has protected this country. An order that has protected our economy. An order that has saved millions of lives in our lifetime.

Murphy concluded: “In a short term 'satisfy me now' culture, I understand that many of my Republican [colleagues] get phone calls from their constituents saying 'Ukraine hasn't won this war tomorrow, I’m not interested any longer', but this conflict matters and it matters that we stick with Ukraine. Because if we lose, if we lose, we're living in an entirely new world. The cap is off on state-on-state violence and pretty soon America will be in one of those conflicts with another nuclear nation. We won't be talking about thousands of Ukrainians dying. We will be talking about millions of Americans.”

A full transcript of his remarks can be found below:

“Thank you very much, Mr. President. I want to thank Senator Murray and Senator Reed for leading us in this time. I want to make two relatively brief points to that the discussion, and then I'll turn it over to others of my colleagues.

“First, I understand that my Republican colleagues want to avoid the question of Republican priorities. The fact of the matter is an Israel only funding bill passed through the House of Representatives and attached to it was a massive giveaway for the richest Americans – millionaires and billionaires who don't pay their taxes.

“And so, as we chart the path forward for a bill that only funds Israel we know that in the House of Representatives it has to be matched with a massive, massive giveaway for millionaires and billionaires. And I don't think you can ignore that fact that a large swath of the Republican Party is using this crisis in Israel in order to deliver yet another gift to the very small slice of Americans who don't need any more gifts.

“There are 700 billionaires in this country who have more net worth than 50% of all Americans. The rules are already rigged in favor of the super wealthy. And so the idea that we would facilitate a plan in the House of Representatives to use Israel aid as a means to continue to rig the rules in favor of those ultra-rich Americans is just incredibly distasteful. And it's a signal about where the Republican Party priorities are today.

“Second, I do want to talk about what Senator Vance and others talked about – about the lazy precedent-referencing, sloganeering that they accuse Democrats of engaging in.

“So it is correct that what is happening today in Ukraine does not have a modern precedent. Because never before in our lifetime, in the post-World War II order, has a large nuclear nation like Russia invaded another large neighboring nation with the purpose of annexation. What Russia is trying to do is to fundamentally change the rules, fundamentally shift international norms that have been in place since World War II. At the foundation of it is that countries don't change their borders [through] force, through aggression.

“It is important to understand that these are the rules that undergirded the last 70 years of U.S. growth and U.S. national security. So we don't believe that we should support Ukraine because we just believe that Vladimir Putin is Adolf Hitler. We don't believe we should support Ukraine to perpetuate some slogan about American greatness. No, we believe that we have an interest – because as the most powerful nation in the world, as the nation that has benefited most from the post-World War II order – to defend those rules because if we don't, no one else will.

“And it just strikes me that my Republican colleagues who have this fatalistic view of what is going to happen in Ukraine just really view America as weak, as impotent, and as [powerless] in the face of this unprecedented aggression from Vladimir Putin.

“America's greatness is connected to our willingness to stand up and lead in moments of crisis. And this is a unique moment of crisis without precedent, which is why it requires the United States to stand against Russia's aggression. Listen for thousands of years, we know this because you read about it in your history books growing up, for thousands of years prior to the establishment of the post-World-War II order, this world was defined by state-on-state, civilization-on-civilization violence and conflict. People labored under the constant threat that their entire world would be ended by another one of these civilization-on-civilization conflicts.

“But this was back in the time when weapons were crude. They were swords. They were bows and arrows, and then, they were simple firearms. Millions died, but millions also survived. We live in a very different era today, where we frankly have to be more, not less worried, not permissive and fatalistic about the consequences of re-entering a world and a paradigm in which states enter into conflict against other states.

“Why? Because we now live in a world filled with weapons of mass destruction. Not just nuclear weapons, but other highly sophisticated weapons. And so now, this kind of conflict that Russia and Ukraine are engaged in, that's the kind of conflict that can wipe out millions in a day. That's why the United States of America has stood up for the post-World War II order. That's why we have fought and sometimes died to maintain it. And this is the most significant affront to that order. An order that has protected this country. An order that has protected our economy. An order that has saved millions of lives in our lifetime.

“It is hard. Ukraine's mission is difficult. In a short term 'satisfy me now' culture, I understand that many of my Republican [colleagues] get phone calls from their constituents saying 'Ukraine hasn't won this war tomorrow, I’m not interested any longer', but this conflict matters and it matters that we stick with Ukraine. Because if we lose, if we lose, we're living in an entirely new world. The cap is off on state-on-state violence and pretty soon America will be in one of those conflicts with another nuclear nation. We won't be talking about thousands of Ukrainians dying. We will be talking about millions of Americans.

“So I appreciate my colleagues being here today, and I think this is as important as it gets. I think we really are deciding the future of this world and the rules that govern it. And I join my colleagues in objecting to this motion.”

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