Europeans should send funds for at least several months while Washington reviews its assistance programs, lawmakers have said
Ukrainian members of parliament have appealed to non-US donors to step in and fund local media outlets and NGOs following Washington’s suspension of most foreign assistance programs.
Last week, President Donald Trump ordered a 90-day review of aid schemes, halting cash flows. Many affected programs were run by USAID, Washington’s soft power agency that distributes billions of dollars of assistance each year for projects that promote the US interests around the world, under the premise of humanitarian development. It spent over $60 billion in 2023 alone.
Ukrainian recipients of American grants were hit “worse than it may seem,” a statement by the parliamentary committee on humanitarian affairs said on Wednesday. Lawmakers anticipate that it will take up to six months for US funding to fully resume, and have urged European sponsors step in.
“Given the constraints on public funding, grants remain virtually the only way for cultural and media projects to function,” it said.
The urgency of the situation was previously highlighted by Ukrainian content creators. Oksana Romanyuk, executive director of a Kiev-based media research non-profit, warned that 90% of news outlets in Ukraine rely heavily on foreign grants. With USAID operations frozen, many of them are now soliciting emergency donations.
The Ukrainian MPs described foreign assistance as “an important part of our path to democratic development and sustainability”. They empathized that USAID was funding projects for children, with thousands of minors attending schools that depend on American taxpayer dollars.
According to media reports, senior officials in the Department of State have lobbied Secretary Marco Rubio to make exemptions for their preferred aid programs, arguing that they are essential for US interests. Meanwhile, at least 60 senior USAID officials reportedly have been placed on paid administrative leave.