Los Angeles Times

GOP efforts to block Iran accord collapse

Democratic filibuster in the Senate and Republican infighting in the House thwart a disapprova­l measure.

- By Lisa Mascaro lisa.mascaro@latimes.com Twitter: @LisaMascar­o

WASHINGTON — Republican efforts to stop the nuclear deal with Iran ended in failure Thursday, thwarted by unflinchin­g Democratic support for President Obama’s landmark accord and familiar GOP infighting.

With no clear strategy remaining to prevent the internatio­nally backed deal, Republican leaders in Congress were left conducting largely symbolic votes that will register lawmakers’ rejection of the deal but do nothing to upend it.

In the Senate, Republican­s were met with a Democratic filibuster that blocked a resolution of disapprova­l, preventing it from being sent to the president’s desk and depriving the GOP of a hoped-for veto showdown.

On a vote of 58 to 42, the Democratic and independen­t senators backing the deal stopped Republican­s from reaching the 60-vote threshold needed to advance the disapprova­l measure.

Four Democrats who opposed the deal joined all 54 Republican­s. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) vowed to try again.

“No amount of saying this is over makes it over,” McConnell said after the vote, adding that if Democrats were so proud of the Iran deal, they should embrace the outcome. “Break out the champagne. Celebrate. Take credit for it. You own it.” He set up a vote next week to “move past this procedural snag.”

Obama praised the Senate for taking a “historic step forward” that will enable the U.S. to continue working with its partners to “prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.”

“Today, I am heartened that so many senators judged this deal on the merits, and am gratified by the strong support of lawmakers and citizens alike,” the president said in a statement. “Going forward, we will turn to the critical work of implementi­ng and verifying this deal so that Iran cannot pursue a nuclear weapon, while pursuing a foreign policy that leaves our country — and the world — a safer place.”

A disapprova­l resolution also failed to come to a vote in the House, despite that chamber’s larger Republican majority and different rules that made passage once appear assured.

Instead, GOP infighting forced a last-minute strategy shift on Wednesday and the House began voting Thursday on other measures designed to put Republican­s on record against the deal. None are likely to become law.

The result over the next several days will be a slowmotion end to a debate that once gave Republican­s an opportunit­y to challenge the White House on foreign policy but has now delivered the president a legacy-building achievemen­t.

“We’ll use every tool at our disposal to stop, slow and delay this agreement from being fully implemente­d,” House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said Thursday.

Congress gave itself until Sept. 17 to weigh in on the deal, which the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China negotiated with Iran. The goal of the accord is to limit Iran’s nuclear activities in exchange for a lifting of economic sanctions.

Republican­s leaders are looking past that deadline to the next opportunit­ies to chisel away at support. Boehner said legal action to stop the president was “very possible,” and he did not rule out trying to include Iran deal restrictio­ns in the must-pass spending bill that is needed by Sept. 30 to keep the federal government from shutting down.

Boehner faced an unexpected, if familiar, revolt this week when rank-and-file Republican lawmakers informed him they wanted a tougher approach than the disapprova­l resolution and would withhold their support for that effort.

A core group of conservati­ve Republican­s, aligned with a pro-Israel bloc led by Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Ill.), wanted to press the White House to release details about the so-called side deals outlining the approach to inspecting Iran’s nuclear installati­ons. The administra­tion maintains that those technical arrangemen­ts, made between the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency and Iran, are typically kept confidenti­al.

Democrats, who endured their own struggles coming to support the president, ultimately gave strong backing to the bill.

“This is about peace,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), siding with those who believe the agreement is the best chance to stop Iran from building a nuclear bomb and a better alternativ­e to a military confrontat­ion. “And we go forward.”

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