SAMARA REGION, RUSSIA - FEBRUARY 24, 2022: An oil tank battery at the Novokuibyshevsk Refinery, a subsidiary of Rosneft Oil Company, in the city of Novokuibyshevsk 20 km southwest of Samara. The enterprise's primary distillation capacity is 8.8 million tons per year. The Novokuibyshevsk Refinery is one of the major manufacturers and suppliers of the superior grade of fuel for jet engines of the brand RT, the most in-demand type in Russia. Yegor Aleyev/TASS.No use Russia.
Western allies move to cut Russian energy imports
03:11 - Source: CNNBusiness
CNN  — 

The House voted with a wide bipartisan majority Wednesday to pass a ban on importing Russian oil, natural gas and coal into the United States.

The bill will also take steps to revisit Russia’s role in the World Trade Organization and reauthorize the Magnitsky Act to strengthen sanctions on Russia for human rights violations.

The final vote was 414-17, with two Democrats – Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri and Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota – and 15 Republican members voting against the bill.

Though the bill garnered wide support, it was not immune to the drama that accompanies most major pieces of legislation.

The White House asked the House Ways and Means Committee on Monday to pause on introducing legislation to ban Russian oil imports in order to work out “issues” with the bipartisan agreement reached on the Hill, a source familiar with the conversation tells CNN.

With the momentum on the legislation briefly paused, Capitol Hill leadership got involved to continue conversations with the White House throughout Monday, the source told CNN.

The earlier version of the legislation included a provision that would suspend permanent normal trade relations for Russia and Belarus. But the White House expressed concerns over that part of the bill, and ultimately it was excised.

The Republican ranking member of the House Ways and Means panel, Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, characterized the revised legislation as a weaker bill, but said that even with the watered down provision, “there’s certainly bipartisan support” for the bill.

“I thought revoking (permanent normal trade relations) was a very strong sanction, and I was very disappointed that was dropped from the bill,” Brady said.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had originally scheduled the bill to come to the House floor for a vote on Tuesday, but it ran into snags when Republicans wouldn’t commit to provide enough votes to get the bill passed under a suspension of the rules, which requires a 2/3 majority to pass, according to a Democratic leadership aide.

The House Rules Committee met in the early Wednesday morning hours on the bill enabling it to be passed with a simple majority.