Los Angeles Times

Biden targets GOP bill in first veto

Taking on the new Republican House, president gears up for bigger fights on debt limit and spending.

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WASHINGTON — President 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 of Representa­tives in January. He’s seeking to kill a Republican measure that bans the government from considerin­g environmen­tal impacts or potential lawsuits when making investment decisions for Americans’ retirement plans.

It’s just the latest manifestat­ion of the new relationsh­ip, and Biden is gearing up for even bigger fights with Republican­s on government spending and raising the nation’s debt limit in the next few months.

The measure vetoed by Biden ended a Trump-era ban on federal managers of retirement plans considerin­g factors such as climate change, social impacts or pending lawsuits when making investment choices.

Because suits and climate change have financial repercussi­ons, administra­tion officials argue that the investment limits are courting possible disaster.

Critics say environmen­tal, social and governance — or ESG — 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 to overturn the Labor Department’s action argue that ESG is just the latest example of the world trying to get “woke.”

Biden, in a video released by the White House, said he vetoed the measure because it “put at risk the retirement savings of individual­s across the country.”

Only two Democrats in the Senate voted for the investment limits, making it unlikely that backers of a potential veto-override effort in Congress could reach the two-thirds majority required in each chamber.

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