For the first time, the United States Congress annuls Donald Trump’s defense veto bill


For the first time, the US Congress annuls Trump's defense veto bill

The first time lawmakers have done so during the Trump presidency. (Archive)

Washington:

On Friday, the United States Congress dealt Donald Trump a humiliating blow in his final days in office with the Senate voting overwhelmingly to override his veto on a radical defense bill, the first time lawmakers have done so in his presidency.

By an uneven vote of 81-13, far more than the two-thirds of the 100-member chamber required, the Republican-controlled Senate passed the $ 740.5 billion National Defense Authorization Act to fund the military for the fiscal year 2021.

The Democratic-led House of Representatives had voted 322-87 on Monday to override Trump’s veto.

Both houses of Congress easily passed the legislation in early December by a strong majority, but Trump, citing a litany of objections, vetoed it on December 23.

“It is time that we deliver this bill,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said at the start of Friday’s session.

“This is our opportunity to remember the brave service members and their families that we stand behind them.”

The vote completed a shocking rebuke in the final weeks of Trump’s presidency.

It came in an extraordinary session on New Years Day necessitated by his veto, possibly the final act of the outgoing Congress.

The new members will be sworn in on Sunday, just 17 days before Democrat Joe Biden takes office to succeed Trump.

Trump’s complaints

In breaking with members of his party, Trump had criticized the defense bill on numerous grounds.

He called it a “gift” to China and Russia and said it restricted their ability to reduce troop numbers in Afghanistan, South Korea and elsewhere.

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Trump had been enraged at the language to rename the military facilities that currently honor the leaders of the dissident Civil War-era Confederacy.

He also insisted that the bill should include a repeal of a federal law, known as Section 230, that provides liability protection to internet companies like Facebook, Twitter and Google, which it regularly accuses of anti-conservative bias.

“Our Republican Senate just missed an opportunity to ditch Section 230, which gives unlimited power to big tech companies,” Trump tweeted after the vote. “Pathetic!!!”

Referring to the Senate’s refusal to vote first on a motion to increase pandemic aid controls, he added: “Now they want to give the virus-ravaged people of China $ 600, instead of the $ 2000 they so desperately need.” using a term that he applies. to the coronavirus that has been widely denounced as racist and fueling conspiracy theories.

But members of the president’s own Republican Party, which traditionally prides itself on being strong on defense, underscored the importance of the bill.

“It is absolutely vital to our national security and our troops,” said Republican Senator Jim Inhofe, chairman of the Armed Services Committee.

“Our men and women who volunteer to wear the uniform shouldn’t be denied what they need, ever.”

Democrats in both houses had criticized Trump’s veto. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, called it “an act of recklessness.”

Senator Jack Reed, the highest-ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, told the Senate floor on Friday that the bill was “essential” to bolster the nation’s cybersecurity against the kind of widespread targeted attack that recently affected both the government and some private companies.

Regarding Trump’s comment that Moscow and Beijing could pass the bill, Reed said any such suggestion was “completely unfounded.”

In the Senate plenary on Friday, Inhofe and Reed repeatedly congratulated each other on their months-long collaboration on the broad bill, a rare example of cross-cutting cooperation in deeply divided Congress.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is posted from a syndicated channel.)

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