US President Barack Obama will use his veto if the new Congress agrees by Republicans supported legislation around the construction of the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline, as spokesman Josh Earnest White House said Tuesday. It may be the coming weeks leading to the first confrontation between the executive and the legislature, said the conservative news channel Fox.
“If this bill got through Congress, the president will not sign,” Fox News quoted Earnest. The Democratic president wants to await a review of the State Department.
The White House came up with the threat of a veto minutes after the 114th Congress for the first meeting. Both rooms were MPs propose legislation around Keystone, as one of their first work and as an important symbolic file for the Grand Ole Party.
In the Senate say Republican John Hoeven and Democrat Joe Manchin that sixty elected officials stand behind the bill and that eventually there will certainly vote for 63. That is more than necessary. In the House of Representatives by a vote Friday there would be no problem, says Fox.
If the legislation gets through Congress and the president will veto, it is the big question is whether the top of the parliament can get a two-thirds majority together to refer that veto to the trash, you know the news.
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