The bipartisan bill passed the lower house by a vote of 418-7, with all those in opposition belonging to the Republican Party. A spokeswoman for MP Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) Said the MP had mistakenly voted against the bill and planned to tell House officials that she wanted to vote in favor. GOP representatives Andy Biggs (Ariz.), Warren Davidson (Ohio), Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Marjorie Taylor Greene (Ga.), Thomas Massie (Ky.) And Scott Perry (Pa.) Were all opposed to the bill. . Wednesday’s vote was not the first time Biggs, Greene and Massie have opposed legislation in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Last month, the troika voted against a bill to suspend normal trade relations with Russia, along with five other Republicans. The eight GOP members who oppose the bill have worked to maintain close ties with former President Trump and have often been found on the far-right wing of the Republican Party. In a video posted on the Internet, Greene said she could not support US involvement in the conflict because there are bigger issues facing Americans at home. Massie wrote on Twitter that he believed the bill gave the president too much power to impose sanctions on other nations. Also last month, Biggs, Greene and Massie voted against a separate bill calling for a ban on Russian oil imports and additional sanctions against Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine. Gossar joined the opposition trio. Biggs said he would not support a ban on Russian oil without a guarantee that the United States would work for energy independence, and Massey wrote on Twitter that he was against the law because Biden had no plans to produce energy. Gossar criticized the bill in a tweet because it did not make the needs of the American people a top priority. And in June, the Biggs, Greene and Massie made headlines for opposing a bill that required Congress to award Gold Medals to U.S. Capitol police and all those who defended the Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021 attack. Pelosi tested positive for COVID-19 Watch live: White House press release Greene told Politico that she voted against the bill because she did not like the fact that the law referred to the Capitol as “the temple of our American Republic” or that she called the January 6 attack an uprising. Updated at 9:01 a.m.