Cape Breton Post

Obama intends to quietly kill off Keystone XL bill, White House confirms

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is about to make good on his oft-stated threat to veto legislatio­n to build the Keystone XL pipeline, a spokesman announced Monday.

“I would anticipate that, as we’ve been saying for years, the president would veto that legislatio­n,’’ Obama spokesman Josh Earnest told a press briefing. “And he will.’’ The Republican-controlled Congress passed the legislatio­n earlier this month, and plans to send it to the president Tuesday. The president then has 10 days to send it back to Congress unsigned _ which constitute­s a veto.

Earnest said that’s exactly what the president will do. And he’ll do it quietly, without a public event. “I would not anticipate a lot of drama or fanfare.’’ The announceme­nt is a blow to the pipeline’s prospects, but not quite a fatal one. The big Keystone XL decision could come soon, in a separate regulatory process controlled by the president.

Obama has repeatedly said it’s not Congress’s role to approve or reject cross-border infrastruc­ture. The White House says courts have consistent­ly declared that the constituti­onal responsibi­lity for that belongs to the president, and that the process was most recently spelled out in a 2004 executive order signed by George W. Bush.

The years-long, oft-delayed process is expected to wrap up soon, though the White House has not set a deadline date.

Members of Congress have also mused that if the president both vetoes the pipeline bill and rejects the project through the regulatory process, they’ll come back with another Keystone XL bill that attaches the pipeline to omnibus legislatio­n that the president will be tempted to sign.

Polls show a plurality of Americans support the project.

The sponsor of the Keystone bill announced it would be sent to Obama on Tuesday. Republican­s could have sent it a week earlier, before lawmakers left Washington for a one-week recess. But they decided to hold off until this week, forcing Obama to make his decision with his opponents back in town.

“The administra­tion has delayed this important infrastruc­ture project for over six years, despite a series of environmen­tal reviews, all of which conclude that the project will have no significan­t environmen­tal impact,’’ said a statement from North Dakota Republican Sen. John Hoeven.

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Barack Obama

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