The Sunday Guardian

TRUMP VETO REJECTED, FACES REBUKE OVER DEFENCE BILL

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT WASHINGTON

Meeting in a rare New Year’s Day session, senators voted 81-13 to secure the two-thirds majority needed to override the veto.

President Donald Trump suffered a stinging rebuke in the U.S. Senate on Friday when fellow Republican­s joined Democrats to override a presidenti­al veto for the first time in his tenure, pushing through a defense policy bill he opposed just weeks before he leaves office.

Meeting in a rare New Year’s Day session, senators voted 81-13 to secure the two-thirds majority needed to override the veto.

Eight previous Trump vetoes had been upheld and until Friday’s vote, he had been on track to be the first president since Lyndon Johnson with none overridden.

The Senate also ended for now a push by Democrats to increase COVID-19 financial relief checks from $600 to $2,000, a change sought by Trump. The effort was blocked by Republican­s.

Republican lawmakers have largely stood by the president during his turbulent White House term.

Since losing his re-election bid in November, however, Trump has lashed out at them for not fully backing his unsupporte­d claims of voter fraud, for rejecting his demand for bigger COVID-19 relief checks, and for moving to override his veto.

In another setback for Trump, a judge rejected a lawsuit filed by a Texas lawmaker and other Republican­s against Vice President Mike Pence seeking to overturn Democratic Presidente­lect Joe Biden’s win. Pence is set to preside on Wednesday over a joint session of Congress to formalize the results of the election.

The Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives on Monday voted to override

Trump’s defense bill veto. A president has the power to veto a bill passed by Congress, but lawmakers can uphold the bill if two-thirds of both houses vote to override the veto.

The $740 billion National Defense Authorizat­ion Act (NDAA) determines everything from how many ships are bought to soldiers’ pay and how to address geopolitic­al threats.

Trump refused to sign it into law because it did not repeal certain legal protection­s for social media platforms and included a provision stripping the names of

Confederat­e generals from military bases.

“We’ve passed this legislatio­n 59 years in a row. And one way or another, we’re going to complete the 60th annual NDAA and pass it into law before this Congress concludes on Sunday,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch Mcconnell had said ahead of the vote.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accused the president of using his final weeks in office “to sow chaos,” saying in a statement that Congress urged him to “end his desperate and dangerous sabotage.”

The bill also overhauls antimoney laundering rules and banning anonymous shell companies, making it easier to police illicit money flows.

U.S. weak rules on disclosing corporate owners have allowed criminals to use legal entities to shuffle their cash around the world, according to the authoritie­s.

The vote could have implicatio­ns for two U.S. Senate runoff elections in Georgia on Tuesday that will decide control of the chamber under Biden, who takes office on Jan. 20. The senators facing a runoff, Republican­s David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, strongly back both Trump and the military.

Neither Perdue nor Loeffler voted on Friday. Neither did another staunch Trump ally, Senator Lindsey Graham. Perdue entered quarantine this week after contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19. Spokesmen for Loeffler and Graham did not respond to requests seeking comment.

The push to have Confederat­e names stripped from U.S. bases gained momentum after George Floyd, an unarmed black man, was killed by a Minneapoli­s police officer last May, triggering protests over racial injustice.

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