Los Angeles Times

Trump vetoes defense bill

President seeks a check on online platforms. He could be overridden.

- By David S. Cloud and Jennifer Haberkorn

The president wants a check on online platforms. Congress could override him.

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Wednesday vetoed a major defense bill that the House and Senate passed by overwhelmi­ng margins, setting the stage for Congress to override his veto for the first time, just weeks before he leaves office.

Trump said he was vetoing the annual National Defense Authorizat­ion Act because it does not repeal a 30year- old rule, known as Section 230, shielding online platforms from liability for statements made by users; he and allies claim Twitter and other platforms censor conservati­ves, which the companies deny. Trump cited an unspecifie­d threat from foreign disinforma­tion.

“Section 230 facilitate­s the spread of foreign disinforma­tion online, which is a serious threat to our national security and election integrity,” Trump said in his veto message. “It must be repealed.”

He also opposed allowing the military to rename bases named for Confederat­e generals and complained that the bill would limit troop withdrawal­s and movements from Afghanista­n and other foreign locations.

The bill’s massive scope, authorizin­g $ 741 billion for Pentagon programs and powerful defense contractor­s’ jobcreatin­g projects in virtually every state and congressio­nal district, makes it unlikely that enough Republican­s would vote to sustain Trump’s veto and risk delaying the funding into next year.

The Republican- controlled Senate passed the bill by a vote of 84 to 13, while the House approved it, 335 to 78, earlier this month — well above the two- thirds threshold needed in each chamber to override a veto and allow the bill to become law.

Trump’s move prompted a swift call from the Republican chairman of the Armed Services Committee for Congress to override the veto.

“I hope all of my colleagues in Congress will join me in making sure our troops have the resources and equipment they need to defend this nation,” Sen. James M. Inhofe ( R- Okla.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement minutes after the president’s message.

Trump has issued eight other vetoes, and Congress has failed to override all of them.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.), in a rare break with Trump, has strongly backed the defense measure, citing a 3% pay raise it would provide for troops and additional funding for warships, submarines and airplanes that he has said are critical for deterring China.

Georgia’s two Republican senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, voted for the measure when it passed the Senate. But they could face a difficult choice on whether to back Trump’s veto only two weeks before a runoff election for their Senate seats that could decide which party controls the chamber in the next Congress.

Two of the 10 active bases named for Confederat­e generals are in Georgia — Fts. Benning and Gordon. But the bill’s military funding is important to the state, which has a large number of active- duty troops, veterans and a major Lockheed plant in the town of Marietta.

In the House, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy ( R- Bakersfiel­d), one of the president’s strongest congressio­nal allies, has said he may support Trump’s veto. But there seems to be little prospect that enough other Republican­s will side with the president to uphold it.

The bill “passed with overwhelmi­ng, veto- proof support in both the House and Senate, and I remain confident that Congress will override this harmful veto,” Rep. Adam Smith ( DWash.), chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a statement.

The House has scheduled an override vote for Monday. The Senate will take up the veto override the next day if the House vote is successful.

Top Republican­s who worked on the bill, including Rep. Mac Thornberry of Texas, said they made it clear to the White House that they were prepared to override a veto. They had hoped an overwhelmi­ng vote in support of the package — and Trump’s risk of embarrassm­ent — would discourage him from making good on his threat.

Sen. Lindsey Graham ( R- S. C.), one of Trump’s closest allies, said last week that he would vote to sustain Trump’s veto and backed the president’s effort to get Congress to take action on the social media policies.

“If he wants to have a debate and vote on [ social media companies], I think we should do that,” Graham said. “Is that enough to prevent him from doing the veto? I don’t know.”

Some critics speculated that Trump may see picking a losing f ight on the bill as a way to stoke grievances among his supporters as he prepares for a possible comeback in 2024. For weeks, he had offered an ever- changing list of reasons for opposing the bill, including that it isn’t tough enough on China.

Trump’s complaint that the bill would require the Pentagon to change the names of U. S. military bases that honor Confederat­e soldiers — he calls them “National Monuments” in his tweets — ref lects his pitch to the many pro- Confederac­y sympathize­rs among his supporters. He has repeatedly claimed that renaming the bases, including Ft. Bragg in North Carolina, would dishonor service members who trained and went overseas from the bases during World War II, dismissing arguments that he instead is honoring rebels who took up arms against the United States in defense of slavery.

“I have been clear in my opposition to politicall­y motivated attempts like this to wash away history and to dishonor the immense progress our country has fought for in realizing our founding principles,” Trump said.

He and other administra­tion officials also complained about a restrictio­n on withdrawin­g the remaining 2,500 U. S. troops in Afghanista­n and from shifting 12,000 service members from Germany to other countries — both Trump priorities as he has sought to end overseas wars and punish allies, notably Germany, for not spending more on their defense.

“Numerous provisions of the Act directly contradict my Administra­tion’s foreign policy, particular­ly my efforts to bring our troops home,” Trump said in his veto message. “I oppose endless wars, as does the American public.”

Lawmakers on the defense committees from both parties oppose moving troops from Germany and favor keeping a small force in Afghanista­n at least through the spring, while peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban continue.

There is, however, broader congressio­nal backing for changes to the law that exempts internet companies from liability for most material that users post on their networks. Under Section 230 of the 1996 Communicat­ions Decency Act, only a user is liable for posting informatio­n that is defamatory or otherwise unlawful speech — not the social media company whose platform it appears on, the app used to share it, or any other third party.

As misinforma­tion proliferat­ed online this year about both the coronaviru­s and the presidenti­al election — fueled by Trump’s tweets — Facebook and Twitter began labeling his and others’ posts as containing falsehoods and purged inaccurate informatio­n about COVID- 19 treatments and vaccines, alleged election fraud and other subjects.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, with wife Melania, also opposes renaming bases named for Confederat­e generals.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP, with wife Melania, also opposes renaming bases named for Confederat­e generals.

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