House sends Iran nuclear deal bill to Obama
By
Deirdre Walsh, CNN Senior Congressional Producer
Updated 6:50 PM ET, Thu May 14, 2015
Source: CNN
Washington (CNN)The House of Representatives approved legislation
Thursday that allows Congress to review any deal on Iran's nuclear
program negotiated by the Obama Administration.
The measure passed with an overwhelming bipartisan vote 400-25.
The bill, which was passed by the Senate last week 98-1, now goes to
the President for his signature. Initially the White House resisted
efforts to give Congress a role in weighing in on an agreement. But
once it became apparent that both Republicans and Democrats had a
veto-proof majority, the White House said it would support a
compromise crafted by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman
Bob Corker, R-Tennessee and the top Democrat on the panel, Sen Ben
Cardin, D-Maryland.
During the House debate on the bill Republicans emphasized that they
were deeply skeptical that the Administration could reach a
significant deal with Iran, a country they said repeatedly engaged
in state sponsored terrorism.
"I fear that the agreement that is coming will be too short,
sanctions relief will be too rapid, inspectors will be too
restricted, and Iran's missile program will be plain ignored," Rep.
Ed Royce, R-California, the Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee said on the House floor.
Even Democrats expressed doubt that the Obama Administration could
get the kind of agreement they could back.
"I agree with Secretary Kerry when he says that no deal is better
than a bad deal. The question is, we want to make sure a bad deal
isn't sold as a good deal. And that's why it's important for
Congress to be engaged," Rep. Eliot Engel, the top Democrat on the
House Foreign Relations Committee said on the House floor.
A group of House conservatives pressed House Republican leaders to
allow some changes to the Senate bill, arguing it didn't go far
enough to ensure that the lifting of sanctions didn't mean Iran
could funnel money to terror groups. But their effort was turned
down because leaders believed any effort to reopen the compromise
would unravel it and leave Congress with no role.
Instead, as a gesture to these conservatives, GOP leaders allowed a
vote on a separate measure that would impose sanctions on any
foreign banks who do business with Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant
organization. A similar House bill passed unanimously last year, but
was never considered by the Senate.
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