Orlando Sentinel

Obama vetoes

- By Josh Lederman Associated Press

a $612 billion defense bill and wants it redone, but Republican­s balk.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama vetoed a sweeping $612 billion defense policy bill Thursday in a rebuke to congressio­nal Republican­s, and insisted they send him a better version that doesn’t tie his hands on some of his top priorities.

In an unusual Oval Office ceremony, Obama praised the bill for ensuring the military stays funded and making improvemen­ts on armed forces retirement and cybersecur­ity. Yet he pointedly accused Republican­s of resorting to “gimmicks” and prohibitin­g other changes needed to address security threats.

“Unfortunat­ely, it falls woefully short,” Obama said. “I’m going to be sending it back to Congress, and my message to them is very simple: Let’s do this right.”

In no mood to negotiate, Republican­s vowed to override him.

The rare presidenti­al veto marked the latest wrinkle in the ongoing fight between Obama and Republican­s who control Congress over whether to increase federal spending — and how.

Four years after Congress passed and Obama signed into law strict, across-the-board spending limits, both parties are eager to bust through the caps for defense spending. But Obama has insisted that spending on domestic programs be raised at the same time, setting off a budget clash with Republican­s that shows no signs of a quick resolution.

To sidestep the budget caps, known in Washington as sequestrat­ion, lawmakers added an extra $38.3 billion to a separate account for wartime operations that is immune to the spending limits. The White House has dismissed that approach, arguing it fails to deal with the broader problem or provide long-term budget certainty for the Pentagon.

Obama also rejects the bill as written due to provisions making it harder for him to transfer suspected terror detainees out of the military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, a key campaign promise that Obama is hard-pressed to fulfill before his presidency ends. The White House has also expressed concerns over provisions preventing military base closures and funding equipment beyond what the military says it needs.

Republican­s erupted in near-universal criticism. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, called the veto “misguided, cynical and downright dangerous.” And more than a dozen House and Senate Republican­s, including Iraq and Afghanista­n veterans, joined in accusing Obama of putting politics ahead of the troops.

“Congress should not allow this veto to stand,” said House Speaker John Boehner.

Yet the White House and House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California insisted Democrats had the votes to ensure Obama’s veto stays in place. Barring a veto override, Congress will have to revise the bill or try to settle the larger budget dispute.

Obama has vetoed only a handful of bills before, generally in private. In an effort to call attention to his concerns, the White House invited reporters and photograph­ers to witness him vetoing the bill.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY-AFP ?? President Barack Obama and Republican­s are at odds over federal spending.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY-AFP President Barack Obama and Republican­s are at odds over federal spending.

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