Graham says Russia sanctions bill 'never going back on the shelf' after Trump backs push

Bipartisan Russia sanctions package would impose tariffs on countries buying Russian oil and gas, primarily targeting China and India energy purchases.

President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla., on Jan. 16, 2026. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo)

Graham told Fox News Digital that this time around, he believed the bill would actually get a shot.

"It's never going back on the shelf because President Trump believes he needs it," Graham said. "I think he needs it."

But it has been over a week since Graham announced the president backed the package, and so far, it has yet to make it to the floor in the upper chamber. Lawmakers are also out this week and are set to return to Washington, D.C., next week with the primary objective of preventing a partial government shutdown.

Still, the bipartisan duo has been tweaking the legislation over the last several months, but the core objective would be to slap eye-popping tariffs onto countries buying energy products from Moscow.

The intent is to cripple Russia’s war machine by imposing duties on oil, gas, uranium and other exports, largely purchased by China and India, which account for nearly three-quarters of Moscow’s energy business.

KENNEDY SAYS MILITARY ACTION ON GREENLAND WOULD BE 'WEAPONS-GRADE STUPID' AS GOP RESISTS FORCE

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., believed that Sen. Lindsey Graham's Russia sanctions package should start in the House, given that it would have a budgetary impact.  (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

"But my guess is that if it's something that, you know, the White House — it's important to them, it’s a priority, particularly dealing with Russia and Ukraine, I would assume that they would try and do that," he said.

That’s where there’s a disconnect.

Johnson supports Russia sanctions but has said on multiple occasions that he believes a sanctions bill should originate in the Senate.

He has argued that starting the legislation in the House would drastically slow down its progress, given the numerous committees any package would have to pass through before ever hitting the floor for a vote.

Graham believed that the "sense of urgency now is the greatest it’s been" and noted that he has told Thune that he wants the legislation to start in the Senate, where it has over 80 co-sponsors.

"This is where the idea came from, get a big bipartisan vote and try to get President Trump to use these tools coming from the Congress so we can end this bloodbath," Graham said.

"Now, in a normal world it would, but I just think the momentum is in the Senate," he continued. "We can take a shell — It's not that hard. I mean, I've been working my a-- [off] on this thing for over a year, or whatever how long it's been."

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Blumenthal told Fox News Digital that he had been speaking with his colleagues in the lower chamber and added that there’s "no reason" that the package should get bogged down or tripped up in the House.

Blumenthal and Graham view their sanctions push as providing Trump with another weapon to force Putin to the negotiating table.

He argued that "security is the linchpin here, but forcing Putin to come to the table also involves economic pressure, and ultimately, we want peace, and that will involve both economic and military security."

"I feel very, very encouraged, because I think that a lot is coming together," Blumenthal said.

Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/graham-says-russia-sanctions-bill-never-going-back-shelf-after-trump-backs-push