Mixup on farm bill veto
Mixup on farm bill veto
The House of Representatives voted Wednesday, May 21, to override President Bush's veto of the farm bill, but a procedural mixup apparently made that vote meaningless, according to published reports.
The 316-108 vote was far more than the two-thirds needed to override the veto -- just the second of President Bush's presidency -- but action stalled when it was discovered that Congress had omitted a section of the bill when lawmakers sent the $300 billion farm bill to the White House. That means Mr. Bush vetoed a different bill from the one Congress passed, leaving congressional leaders scrambling to figure out whether it could become law, according to CNN's web site.
Although such errors are often corrected by unanimous agreement of both parties, House Republican leaders maneuvered to block a quick fix, and Congress' next move was unclear.
According to The New York Times, the House could approve the corrected farm bill Thursday, May 22, delaying a vote on the federal budget. The bill would then have to go to the Senate and then to President Bush, who would presumably veto it again, then come back to Congress for another override vote.
The 316-108 vote was far more than the two-thirds needed to override the veto -- just the second of President Bush's presidency -- but action stalled when it was discovered that Congress had omitted a section of the bill when lawmakers sent the $300 billion farm bill to the White House. That means Mr. Bush vetoed a different bill from the one Congress passed, leaving congressional leaders scrambling to figure out whether it could become law, according to CNN's web site.
Although such errors are often corrected by unanimous agreement of both parties, House Republican leaders maneuvered to block a quick fix, and Congress' next move was unclear.
According to The New York Times, the House could approve the corrected farm bill Thursday, May 22, delaying a vote on the federal budget. The bill would then have to go to the Senate and then to President Bush, who would presumably veto it again, then come back to Congress for another override vote.