Posted on 03/13/2019 4:34:50 PM PDT by be-baw
The Senate broke with President Trump on Wednesday over the Saudi-led military campaign in Yemen, paving the way for a veto showdown with the White House.
Senators voted 54-46 to pass a resolution requiring the president to withdraw any troops in or "affecting" Yemen within 30 days unless they are fighting al Qaeda.
GOP Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Steve Daines (Mont.), Mike Lee (Utah), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Jerry Moran (Kan.), Rand Paul (Ky.) and Todd Young (Ind.) voted with Democrats on the resolution.
The chamber first passed the resolution in December, but it did not pass the GOP-controlled House before the end of the 115th Congress and was reintroduced this year.
The Senate vote comes hours after the White House formally threatened to veto the resolution, arguing it was flawed and has an erroneous premise.
The joint resolution would raise serious constitutional concerns to the extent that it seeks to override the Presidents determination as Commander in Chief, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) said.
The resolution still needs to pass the House before it heads to Trumps desk. Senate supporters believe it could get a vote in the lower chamber as soon as Thursday, paving the way for potentially the first veto of Trumps presidency.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) said he expected the House would take up the legislation in the next couple of weeks.
Our office is working with leadership and the [Congressional Progressive Caucus] to finalize a date of when we will pass the Senate [War Powers Resolution] and send it to the president's desk, his office added.
Wednesdays vote comes a day before the Senate is likely to also pass a resolution of disapproval blocking Trumps emergency declaration setting up a one-two punch that will force the president to reject back-to-back legislation from Capitol Hill.
Im sure Republicans want to ... peel two Band-Aids off at once; it hurts less, said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a co-sponsor of the Yemen legislation. This will be the first two vetoes coming in rapid succession. Maybe Republicans did notice the 2018 election.
Saudi Arabia has emerged as a growing split between Trump and Congress in the wake of the slaying last fall of Washington Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi, who was a critic of the Saudi government.
Trump has refused to pin the blame of Khashoggis death on Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, saying in a widely panned statement late last year that maybe he did and maybe he didnt" order the slaying. Trump added that the U.S. "may never know all of the facts surrounding the murder" of Khashoggi.
Khashoggi was last seen entering the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2. The Saudi government maintained that the killing was carried out by rogue agents as part of an interrogation that went off track an explanation that has been met with heavy skepticism by lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
Trumps stance has put him at odds with Republicans in Congress as well as his own intelligence community, which has reportedly determined that the Saudi crown prince ordered the killing of Khashoggi.
The Trump administration also dispatched officials to Capitol Hill to brief the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about its investigation, ordered by members of the panel last year, into Khashoggis death. But the closed-door briefing only infuriated Republicans, who characterized the meeting as a waste of time where they learned very little.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, said if the administration wanted to try to squash the Yemen resolution they should have made more progress on the Khashoggi situation.
We need to take this step to show while they dont care about it, we do. ... If they had taken some meaningful step in the Khashoggi situation they might have increased the odds that some of us wouldnt vote to refudiate their efforts in Yemen, but theyve done nothing, said Kaine. So that means youre going to get a lot of votes for the Yemen resolution.
But frustrations on Capitol Hill with the U.S.-Saudi relationship run deeper than just Khashoggis death.
The only override of a veto from former President Obama was when Congress shot down his attempt to block legislation allowing families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia in U.S. courts. The veto override passed the Senate 97-1.
And senators have tried to pass the Yemen resolution for years over concerns that Saudi Arabia wasnt doing enough to limit civilian casualties with its strikes in Yemen. Theyve put a blockade on arms sales to Saudi Arabia and were able to successfully pass the resolution in December.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a Democratic presidential candidate who is co-sponsoring the Yemen resolution, said the Senates vote made Wednesday an extremely important day.
We can finally begin the process of reasserting Congresss responsibility over war making. As every school child should know, Article 1 of the Constitution clearly states that it is Congress, not the president, that has the power to declare war, Sanders said.
Most Republicans voted against the Yemen resolution on Wednesday, with Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) urging senators to oppose it.
I believe it is right for senators to have grave concerns over some aspects of Saudi Arabias behavior, particularly the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. That is not what this resolution is about. ... If senators continue to have concerns about Saudi behavior, they should raise them in hearings, and directly with the administration, and directly with Saudi officials as I have done, McConnell said.
McConnell added that while the U.S. objective should be to end the years-long war in Yemen, this resolution will not end this conflict.
But foreign policy has emerged as a consistent sticking point between Republicans and Trump, who put overhauling the partys foreign policy at the center of his presidential campaign.
In addition to Saudi Arabia, Republicans passed Russia sanctions legislation in 2017 despite objections from the White House. And GOP senators fumed during a closed-door meeting with Vice President Pence late last year after Trumps decision to withdraw troops from Syria caught them flat-footed the president has since backed off his decision.
Murphy acknowledged that the only reason the Yemen resolution was getting through the Senate is because Democrats were able to pick up handful of GOP senators, adding that their patience is running thin for the presidents foreign policy."
[But] were only getting a couple of Republicans on Yemen, he added. We shouldnt overstate the Republican Trump renaissance.
Rebecca Kheel contributed
It’s not, Yemen is another proxy war for the perpetual war crowd to engage in endless resource conflicts.
0bama started all sorts of wars without end and these losers never lifted a finger in opposition.
Yemen is a proxy war between Saudi Arabia (mostly Sunni) and Iran (mostly Shia) I believe.
Yemen is at the southern tip of the Red Sea (Suez Canal up north).
Would seem that it’s potentially strategic. Much like the Strait of Hormuz by Iran on the other side.
Others, please comment. TIA
Too bad the senate republicans didn’t oppose Obama the way they oppose their own republican president.
I was thinking the same thing.
They can because our base never raises a freakin stink!!! RNC chairwoman was on Lou Dobbs and I couldn’t believe her answers to Lou’s questions!! I was literally screaming at the screen!!! That *Itch needs to be replaced!!! I wanted her to say that the RNC is tightening the screws on the anti trumpers..BUT NOOOOOOO she kept repeating the same line..lower unemployment yada yada ...stupid witch!!! NOT ONE RED CENT FROM ME!! Screw them!!!
i need more info about this but...
just about anything the D’s (with Collins, Mookowski, and Ryan) are for..... ... I’m against!
Did the Senate finally find a war not worth fighting?
[Would seem that its potentially strategic. Much like the Strait of Hormuz by Iran on the other side.]
We are assisting the Saudis in mostly covert ops. Nothing like Syria or Afghanistan.
Never lifted a finger. Ever.
We should not be accomplices to clear Saudi Barbarian war crimes anywhere, including Yemen.
Obama was the one who sent the troops to Yemen in 2016. Where were the gutless GOP wonders then?
I like dead muzzies as much as the next guy but we don’t need to n e involved directly.
May want to use different location analogy (for lack of sympathy purposes)
Looks like it. Why should the USA commit ground forces to this action? A couple of bombers, some drones, maybe some A10’s. Hell if I wouldn’t rule out nuking it to glass since nothing much good ever came out of it. A kill ratio of a hundred thousand for every U.S.S. Cole sailor killed in Sana’a harbor.
Damn straight - particularly irksome with the excuses some are using (Sen Tom “the turd” Tillis) of NC, soon to be in 2020, the single, one term senator from NC, cause he is going down on his opposing Trump on the emergency wall vote against Trump, because of his using the lame excuse of - too much presidential power - but Tillis didn’t do a damn thing of ever voting against nobama....he is a lying soros owned tool of NWO and a big govt *sshole!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Have called his liberal staffed office many times to tell him so and will ACTIVELY work against his re-election in 2020!
we should just get out
same for Afghanistam
yep
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.