The Freeman

US House backs bill to sue president over laws

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WASHINGTON — Casting Barack Obama as a president run amok, the House voted on Wednesday for a bill that would expedite congressio­nal lawsuits against the chief executive for failure to enforce federal laws.

The vote was 233-181 in the Republican-led House as GOP lawmakers excoriated Obama for multiple changes to his 4year-old health care law, steps he’s taken to allow young immigrants to remain in the United States and the administra­tion’s resistance to defend the federal law banning gay marriage.

Ignoring a White House veto threat, the GOP maintained that the bill was necessary as the president has selectivel­y enforced the nation’s laws.

“Throughout the Obama presidency we have seen a pattern: President Obama circumvent­s Congress when he doesn’t get his way,” said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, RVa., chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

Democrats countered that the legislatio­n was merely election-year rhetoric to address a non-existent problem. The measure stands no chance in the Democratic­led Senate.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., defended Obama and said Republican­s weren’t satisfied with a “do-nothing Congress,” they wanted to “have a do-nothing president.”

Under the bill, the House or Senate would have a fast track for any civil lawsuit against the president if that president “failed to meet the requiremen­t of Article II, section 3, clause 17, of the Constituti­on of the United States to take care that a law be faithfully executed.”

Once litigated in district court, any appeals would be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Republican­s cited the Obama administra­tion’s delays on several deadlines of the Affordable Care Act that the president signed into law in March 2010. Obama has drawn criticism for his June 2012 decision to allow young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children to gain legal status and remain in the United States if they attend school or join the military.

Republican­s also have assailed Obama for tougher action on the environmen­t.

“The president’s dangerous search for expanded powers appears to be endless,” said Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va.

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., sponsor of the bill, read a series of statements by Obama when he was an Illinois senator in which he warned of the encroachme­nt of the executive on the powers of the other branches of government.

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