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House passes sanctions on Russia and aid for Ukraine amid Senate uncertainty

By Editorial Team · Published June 8, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
RegulationSecurity
House passes sanctions on Russia and aid for Ukraine amid Senate uncertainty

House passes sanctions on Russia and aid for Ukraine amid Senate uncertainty

The Ukraine Support Act cleared the House 226-195 with rare bipartisan support, but faces long odds in the Senate and a potential presidential veto.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 8, 2026

The US House of Representatives passed the Ukraine Support Act on June 4, 2026, allocating over $1 billion in security and reconstruction aid and up to $8 billion in military equipment loans for Ukrainian forces. The vote was 226-195, and it took a procedural maneuver, a discharge petition, to even get the bill to the floor.

What’s in the bill and who voted for it

The Ukraine Support Act does two main things. First, it directs over $1 billion toward Ukrainian security and reconstruction efforts. Second, it authorizes up to $8 billion in loans so Ukraine can purchase US military equipment.

On the sanctions side, the legislation expands economic penalties against multiple sectors of the Russian economy. Oil, mining, financial institutions, and Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear energy company, are all in the crosshairs.

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The bill was led by Rep. Gregory Meeks and passed with a coalition that included most Democrats and 18 Republicans who crossed party lines, despite opposition from GOP leaders.

The Senate problem

The Senate has not scheduled a vote on related sanctions legislation, despite the bill having over 80 bipartisan sponsors in the upper chamber. Any standalone bill needs 60 votes to clear procedural hurdles in the Senate.

Even if the Senate musters 60 votes, President Trump has consistently prioritized diplomatic negotiations over military assistance when it comes to the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Overriding a veto requires two-thirds of both chambers. The House vote of 226-195 falls well short of that threshold.

What this means for crypto investors

The Ukraine Support Act does not reference digital assets, cryptocurrency, or blockchain technology in any meaningful way. The sanctions it proposes target conventional economic sectors: energy, mining, finance, and nuclear power.

When the US sanctioned Russian entities in earlier rounds during 2022 and 2023, there were explicit conversations about crypto being used to evade those restrictions, and some of those conversations turned into policy proposals. The absence of crypto-specific language in the Ukraine Support Act suggests that lawmakers are keeping digital asset regulation on a separate legislative track.

The bill’s focus on Russian oil and mining sectors is relevant to crypto markets. Energy sanctions can ripple through global commodity prices, which in turn affect inflation expectations and monetary policy, two forces that have been reliable drivers of crypto market direction over the past several years.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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