CONGRESS
House votes to override Trump veto of defense
bill
The Senate is set to return to the Capitol on Tuesday
to take up the issue.
Lawmakers voted 322 to 87 to override Trump's veto of
the National Defense Authorization Act.
By CONNOR
O’BRIEN
12/28/2020
07:13 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/28/defense-veto-override-trump-451696
The House
on Monday rejected a bid by President Donald Trump to derail major defense
policy legislation, rendering a bipartisan rebuke to the president in the final
weeks of his administration.
Lawmakers
voted 322 to 87 to override Trump's veto of the National Defense Authorization
Act. If the Senate follows suit, lawmakers will deliver Trump the first and
only veto override of his presidency.
The Senate
is set to return to the Capitol on Tuesday to take up the issue, though a final
vote may not occur until later this week. Two thirds of both chambers must sign
off to enact the bill over Trump's objections, and lawmakers have until the new
Congress is sworn in on Jan. 3 to finish the task.
Trump
rejected the bill, H.R. 6395 (116), last week after lawmakers refused to budge on
his last-minute demand to include a repeal of legal protections for social
media companies. He also objected to provisions in the bill that would remove
the names of Confederate leaders from military bases and place restrictions on
U.S. troop withdrawals from Afghanistan and Europe.
But
lawmakers in both parties closed ranks to salvage the popular legislation,
which has become law each year for nearly six decades. This year's bill passed
the House earlier this month 335-78 and a sailed through the Senate by a vote
of 84-13.
Monday's
override vote was a rare rebuke of Trump by Republican lawmakers, who have been
hesitant to cross the president even as he fights a losing legal and political
battle to overturn the results of the presidential election.
Republicans
could have sunk the legislation if they sided with Trump and switched their
votes en masse. But a slew of GOP lawmakers did switch votes — 109 House
Republicans voted to overturn Trump's veto compared to the 140 who supported
the compromise bill earlier this month.
Democrats,
meanwhile, boosted their support for the bill, with 212 voting to override
compared to 195 who supported the bill nearly three weeks ago.
Ahead of
the vote, lawmakers from both parties warned that torpedoing the bill would
have harsh consequences for the military, with many key pay and benefit
provisions expiring on Dec. 31.
Leaders of
the House Armed Services Committee underscored that Trump's chief objection is
unrelated to national security and falls outside the panel's jurisdiction.
"The
president vetoed this because of something that isn't in the bill and was never
going to be in the bill, something totally unrelated to national security,"
Armed Services Chair Adam Smith (D-Wash.) said. "There is literally no
reason for to veto this bill for the reasons that the president did, and
certainly no reason for us not to uphold what we did in passing this
bill."
The top
Armed Services Republican, Mac Thornberry, pushed lawmakers to hold the line
and noted that more than 80 percent of the House supported the same defense
bill earlier this month.
"It's
the exact same bill," Thornberry said. "Not a comma has
changed."
"Our
troops, the country, indeed the world is watching to see what we will do,
whether we can tune out other difference and still come together to support the
men and women of the military and American national security," he added.
No
lawmakers spoke in favor of upholding the veto ahead of the vote.
The bill is
named in honor of Thornberry, who is retiring from Congress after 13 terms in
the House. Following Trump's veto last week, the Texas Republican circulated a
note urging GOP lawmakers to base their votes on the myriad provisions in the
bill rather than "distortions or misrepresentations" about the
legislation.
A
presidential veto has loomed over the must-pass bill for months.
Trump first
threatened to veto the defense bill over the summer after the Senate Armed
Services Committee adopted an amendment from progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.) to force the renaming bases that honor Confederates over a three-year
period. The House followed suit with a provision to rename bases within a year,
and a compromise bill included Warren's provision.
Trump also
threatened to nix the bill late in negotiations between the House and Senate
this month unless lawmakers repealed the online liability protections, known as
Section 230. The issue is unrelated to national security, and many Republicans
have called for a separate debate and vote on legislation to overhaul the law.
Trump said
he'd received a pledge for a vote on a repeal of Section 230 after signing a
separate full-year government funding package and coronavirus stimulus on
Sunday.
"Congress
has promised that Section 230, which so unfairly benefits Big Tech at the
expense of the American people, will be reviewed and either be terminated or
substantially reformed," Trump said in a statement.
Lawmakers
in both parties contend Section 230 should be overhauled, but Democrats have
rejected Trump's calls for a full repeal of the statute.
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