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โIt is a โgiftโ to China and Russia,โ he said in a message to the House of Representatives.
U.S. President Donald Trump vetoed a $740-billion bill setting policy for the Department of Defence on Wednesday, despite its strong support in Congress, raising the possibility that the measure will fail to become law for the first time in 60 years.
Trump said he vetoed the annual National Defence Authorization Act, or NDAA, because it โfails to include critical national security measures, includes provisions that fail to respect our veterans and our militaryโs history, and contradicts efforts by my Administration to put America first in our national security and foreign policy actions.โ
โIt is a โgiftโ to China and Russia,โ he said in a message to the House of Representatives.
Although his previous eight vetoes were all upheld thanks to support from Trumpโs fellow Republicans in Congress, advisers said this one looked likely to be overridden, just weeks before he leaves office on Jan. 20.
Both the Republican-controlled Senate and Democratic-majority House of Representatives passed the 2021 NDAA with margins larger than the two-thirds majorities needed to override a veto.
That means that Trump would have to persuade dozens of his fellow Republicans to throw out nearly a yearโs work on the 4,500-page bill and start over.
Top advisers had urged Trump not to carry out his veto threat, citing the slim chance of stopping the bill. Many of Trumpโs staunchest Republican supporters, including Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Jim Inhofe, said they would vote to override.
โItโs simple, what this bill does,โ Inhofe said when the measure passed the Senate. โIt makes our country more secure, and it supports our troops who defend it.โ
Advisers said Trump had little to gain from a veto and it could hurt his partyโs ability to hang on to two U.S. Senate seats from Georgia in a Jan. 5 runoff vote.
The Senate backed the bill by 84 to 13, with the no votes coming from some of the most conservative Republicans and most liberal Democrats. The Democratic-led House backed the NDAA by 335 to 78, with some โnoโ votes also coming from liberal Democrats less likely to back a Trump veto.
The NDAA determines everything from how many ships are bought to soldiersโ pay to how to address geopolitical threats. The measure vetoed by Trump was a compromise, combining separate measures already passed in the House and Senate.
Lawmakers take pride in the bill having become law every year since 1961, saying it reflects their support for the military.
Trumpโs veto, if upheld, would delay a 3% raise for active-duty troops.
REUTERS