Vancouver Sun

Trump vows to veto defence policy bill

- ANDREA SHALAL

WASHINGTON • U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday repeated his threat to veto a massive defence policy bill, setting the stage for a major battle with U.S. lawmakers at a time when they are racing to hammer out a compromise on more coronaviru­s relief.

The US$740 billion National Defense Authorizat­ion Act (NDAA) passed both houses of Congress with more than the twothirds majority needed to override a presidenti­al veto.

Passage by the Republican-controlled Senate on Friday sent the measure to Trump, giving him 10 days — minus Sundays — to veto it, sign it or allow it become law without his signature.

Trump sh rugged off hopes by backers of the bill that strong bipartisan support for the measure — which has become law for 59 straight years — would prompt him to reconsider his threat.

“THE BIGGEST WINNER OF OUR NEW DEFENSE BILL IS CHINA! I WILL VETO!” Trump tweeted on Sunday as he headed to the golf course he owns outside Washington.

The White House had no immediate comment about when Trump would act or what he meant by the reference to China.

Senator Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the bill contained bipartisan provisions that were “tougher on China than the Trump administra­tion has ever been.”

Trump previously objected to the fiscal 2021 NDAA because it did not repeal Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, which protects technology companies like Google, Twitter and Facebook from liability for what appears on their platforms.

Trump has argued that tech firms have an anti-conservati­ve bias, which the companies deny. Lawmakers from both parties say that concerns about social media should not kill legislatio­n considered essential for the Pentagon.

A source familiar with Trump’s thinking said the president was concerned that Twitter and other platforms often flagged comments by conservati­ves while allowing posts from Chinese officials that the Trump administra­tion considers problemati­c.

Twitter has also flagged posts by Chinese officials in the past, including one in May in which Beijing suggested the coronaviru­s had been brought to China by the U.S. military.

Trump also wants to block an NDAA provision stripping the names of Confederat­e generals from military bases and opposes parts of the legislatio­n that could slow plans to withdraw troops from Afghanista­n and Germany.

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