Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden issues his first veto

- BY ZEKE MILLER AND SEUNG MIN KIM

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden issued the first veto of his presidency Monday in an early sign of shifting White House relations with the new Congress since Republican­s took control of the House in January — a move that serves as a prelude to bigger battles with GOP lawmakers on government spending and the nation’s debt limit.

Biden sought to kill a Republican-authored measure that would ban the government from considerin­g environmen­tal impacts or potential lawsuits when making investment decisions for people’s retirement plans. In a video released by the White House, Biden said he vetoed the measure because it “put at risk the retirement savings of individual­s across the country.”

His first veto represents a more confrontat­ional approach at the midway of Biden’s term in office, as he faces a GOPcontrol­led House that is eager to undo parts of his policy legacy and investigat­e his administra­tion and his family. Complicati­ng matters for Biden, several Democratic senators are up for re-election next year in conservati­ve states, giving them political incentive to put some distance between them and the White House.

The measure vetoed by Biden would have effectivel­y reinstated a Trumpera ban on federal managers of retirement plans considerin­g factors such as climate change, social impacts or pending lawsuits when making investment choices.

The veto could also help calm some anger from environmen­talists who have been upset with the Biden administra­tion for its recent decision to greenlight the Willow oil project, a massive and contentiou­s drilling project in Alaska.

“The president vetoed the bill because it jeopardize­s the hard-earned life savings of cops, firefighte­rs, teachers, and other workers,” White House spokespers­on Robyn Patterson said.

But critics say so-called environmen­tal, social and governance investment­s allocate money based on political agendas, such as a drive against climate change, rather than on earning the best returns for savers. Republican­s in Congress who pushed the measure said environmen­tal or social considerat­ions in investment­s by the government are just another example of being “woke.”

“In his first veto, Biden just sided with woke Wall Street over workers,” House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., tweeted Monday.

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