The Mercury News

Obama doesn’t need Congress on Iran deal

President could stillmove ahead with a ‘no’ vote

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON — The September vote on the Iran nuclear deal is billed as a titanic standoff between President Barack Obama and Congress. Yet even if lawmakers reject the agreement, it’s not game-over for the White House.

A congressio­nal vote of disapprova­l would not prevent Obama from acting on his own to start putting the accord in place. While he probably would take some heavy criticism, this course would let him add the foreign policy breakthrou­gh to his second-term list of accomplish­ments.

Obama doesn’t need a congressio­nal OK to give Iran most of the billions of dollars in relief from economic sanctions that it would get under the agreement, as long as Tehran honors its commitment­s to curb its nuclear program.

“A resolution to disapprove the Iran agreement may have substantia­l political reverberat­ions, but limited practical impact,” says Robert Satloff, executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “It would not override President Obama’s authority to enter into the agreement.”

A look at the current state of play:

What’s ahead?

With Republican­s controllin­g both chambers of Congress, the House and Senate are expected to turn down the deal.

Obama has pledged to veto such a resolution of disapprova­l, so the question has turned to whether Congress could muster the votes to override him, in what would be a stinging, bipartisan vote of no-confidence. Obama would forfeit the authority he now enjoys to waive sanctions that Congress has imposed.

But Democrats and Republican­s have predicted that his expected veto will be sustained. More than half of the Senate Democrats and Independen­ts of the 34 needed to sustain a veto are backing the deal. There is one notable defection so far — New York’s Chuck Schumer, the No. 3 Democrat in the Senate and the party leader-in-waiting.

In the House, more than 45 Democrats have expressed support. Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi has spoken confidentl­y about rounding up the votes to save the deal.

What can Obama do?

The president could suspend some U.S. sanctions. He could issue new orders to permit financial transactio­ns that otherwise are banned now. On the financial sector, Obama could use executive orders to remove certain Iranians and entities, including nearly two dozen Iranian banks, from U.S. lists, meaning they no longer would be subject to economic penalties.

Only Congress can terminate legislativ­e sanctions, and they’re some of the toughest, aimed at Iran’s energy sector, central bank and essential parts of its economy. Still, experts say Obama, on his own, can neutralize the effect of some of those sanctions, and work with the Europeans on softening others.

What is discussed?

The September votes won’t be the final word.

One looming question is whether Congress should try to reauthoriz­e the Iran Sanctions Act, which authorizes many of the congressio­nal sanctions.

Sens. Bob Menendez, DN.J., and Mark Kirk, R-Ill., have introduced legislatio­n to renew it. Menendez says that if administra­tion is serious about reimposing sanctions if Iran cheats, there has to be something to “snap back to.”

Iran could interpret a U.S. move to reauthoriz­e the law as a breach of the nuclear agreement. Administra­tion officials won’t say whether it is or isn’t.

In a webcast, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz told members of the Jewish Federation­s across North America and the Jewish Council of Public Affairs that trying to renegotiat­e the deal was “about the riskiest strategy” he could imagine. “I just don’t think that’s a credible Plan B.”

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