Monday, April 28, 2025

Mike Johnson to detail conservative vision for U.S. foreign policy

Mike Johnson to detail conservative vision for U.S. foreign policy


House Speaker Mike Johnson on Monday will lay out his vision for a conservative American foreign policy, addressing the interconnected global threats posed by China, Russia and Iran, and the path to counter them through U.S. deterrence and hard power.

The discussion, hosted by the Hudson Institute, a Washington think tank, will mark the first time Johnson (R-La.) has publicly commented at length on his foreign policy views. It is scheduled to begin at 2:15 p.m. Eastern time.

Monday’s event comes as European and other foreign leaders descend on Washington this week for the annual summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), where members nations will be focused on efforts to safeguard the alliance from an increasingly aggressive Russia and further help Ukraine repel the superpower. Russian missiles on Monday struck a children’s hospital in the Ukrainian capital, killing dozens.

This is also a fraught moment is U.S. politics, as President Biden struggles to contain mounting concerns within the Democratic Party — and among foreign allies — about his physical and cognitive fitness to win a second term in November, and lead the country for another four years.

“We’ve got a lot of instability in the Middle East, in Europe and in Asia,” said Rebeccah Heinrichs, a senior fellow and defense policy expert at the Hudson Institute, who will moderate Monday’s conversation with Johnson. “And so I think there’s a real demand right now [to hear]: Does Speaker Johnson and the Republican Party, from his perspective, have an assessment, a handle, on the threats facing the country, and a way forward?”

There is a desire amid the domestic turmoil, Heinrichs said, to “see a steady hand at the helm” and a clear vision for U.S. foreign policy. “I think that this is one Republican leader who has great influence, and an ability to set a course.”

Johnson’s foreign policy views have been the subject of speculation since he assumed the House speakership in October. The four-term Republican was not widely known and had little formal foreign policy experience before moving into his leadership role.

Johnson has allied himself with Biden’s expected opponent in November, former president Donald Trump, who has contemplated withdrawing the United States from NATO. Johnson also joined Republican hard-liners in opposing aid to Ukraine, a stance he later reversed after delaying for months a House vote on billions of dollars in additional military support for the country.

Johnson, who has spoken about his support for the “peace through strength” foreign policy doctrine espoused by President Ronald Reagan, ultimately sided with Democrats and moderate Republicans to approve Ukraine aid as part of a larger emergency national security spending package. At the time, some characterized the move as an evolution in his thinking.

Johnson’s office said he will hold meetings with several foreign leaders attending the NATO summit, including his Italian counterpart Lorenzo Fontana and, later in the week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.



Source link