Dayton Daily News

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- By Dina Cappiello

— The White WASHINGTON House on Tuesday threatened to veto the first piece of legislatio­n introduced in the Republican-controlled Senate, a bill approving the much-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline, in what was expected to be the first of many confrontat­ions over energy and environmen­tal policy.

Hours after supporters of the bipartisan bill, which is sponsored by all 54 Senate Republican­s and six Democrats, announced its introducti­on, the White House said for the first time that President Barack Obama would veto it.

“If this bill passes this Congress, the president wouldn’t sign” it, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Tuesday, saying legislatio­n shouldn’t undermine the review process underway at the State Department or circumvent a pending lawsuit in Nebraska over its route.

It’s “premature to evaluate the project before something

as basic as the route of the pipeline has been determined,” he said.

The two main sponsors, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., said Tuesday morning they had enough votes to overcome a filibuster of the bill, but not a presidenti­al veto.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, in one of his first acts, moved to put it directly on the Senate calendar. The House is expected to vote and pass a bill approving the $5.4 billion project, which was first proposed in 2008, on Friday.

“The President threatenin­g to veto the first bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill of the new Congress must come as a shock to the American people who spoke loudly in November in favor of bipartisan accomplish­ments,” McConnell said.

Hoeven said if the president chooses to veto the bill, he would work to attach it to a broader energy package or must-pass spending bills.

Manchin, whose office reached out to the White House earlier in the day, told reporters the veto threat was a surprise that “slapped down” a bipartisan effort before it even got started.

“It’s just wrong. It’s just not the way you do business,” said Manchin, the only Democrat remaining in the West Virginia delegation. “If this is the start of things, it is a sad beginning.”

The bill is identical to one that failed to pass the Senate by a single vote in November, when Democrats were in control and Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana pushed for a vote to save her Senate seat. She lost to Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy, who sponsored the successful House bill approving the pipeline.

But now the odds of passage are much improved with the Republican takeover of the Senate. The bill will also test Republican­s’ commitment to more open debate. Hoeven and Manchin said they welcomed additions to the bill, which they hoped would increase support.

In a letter to Democrats from their leadership, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York and Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan said the Keystone bill was “the first opportunit­y to demonstrat­e that we will be united, energetic, and effective in offering amendments that create a clear contrast with the Republican majority.”

Among the ideas suggested in the letter were measures to prohibit exporting the oil abroad, to ensure American iron, steel and other goods were used in the pipeline’s constructi­on and to match every job created by the pipeline with an investment in clean energy.

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