A bipartisan US House group forced a vote on Ukraine aid and Russia sanctions, Axios reported on 13 May. The breakthrough bypasses Speaker Mike Johnson and triggers a procedural clock for a floor vote by the end of May. Enactment remains unlikely with a Republican-controlled Senate and White House opposition.
The 218th signature breaks a months-long deadlock
California independent Kevin Kiley, who caucuses with Republicans, signed Representative Gregory Meeks's discharge petition on 13 May. His name brought the total to 218, the number needed to force a House floor vote. The petition had languished for months, one signature short.
All 215 House Democrats signed the petition. Republicans Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Don Bacon of Nebraska, both staunch Ukraine supporters, had already added their names. Kiley's signature pushed it over the threshold.

Pentagon just unlocked $400 million in Ukraine aid that had been “collecting dust” after McConnell’s WP column
What the Meeks bill contains
It provides $1.3 billion in military aid for Ukraine, plus authorization for up to $8 billion through direct loans. It would also replenish US weapons stocks depleted by years of aid to Ukraine. The legislation also funds postwar reconstruction and adds fresh sanctions targeting Russia plus the groups backing its war effort.
Meeks, who leads the House Democrats' Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced the bill in April 2025 amid concerns about President Donald Trump's stance toward Moscow. The New York Times reported that Meeks accused the administration of letting Vladimir Putin "dodge, delay and deflect."
The eighth bypass of Speaker Johnson in three years
The Ukraine vote marks the eighth time in three years that lawmakers have used a discharge petition to bypass GOP leadership. The current Congress alone has used it for half a dozen bills. Those include proxy voting in the House, releasing the Epstein files, and protecting Affordable Care Act tax credits.
Discharge petitions require an outright majority — 218 of 435 members — to circumvent the Speaker.


