Obama Vetoes Keystone XL Pipeline Bill

President Barack Obama has vetoed a Republican bill forcing construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.
The White House sent notice of the veto to the Senate on Tuesday, shortly after the bill was received at the White House. It’s the third veto of Obama’s presidency.

 
The move puts a freeze on a top GOP priority, at least for now. It also reasserts Obama’s authority over a project that’s become a flashpoint in the national debate about climate change.
 
Congressional Republicans may try to override Obama’s veto, but have yet to show they can muster the two-thirds majority in both chambers that they would need. Sen. John Hoeven, the bill’s chief GOP sponsor, says Republicans are about four votes short in the Senate and need about 11 more in the House.
 

W.Va. Senators Respond to President's Position on Pipeline

West Virginia’s U.S. Senators responded Tuesday to President Obama’s announcement that should the Keystone XL Pipeline be approved by Congress, he intends to veto the bill.

The proposed pipeline would run from tar sands oil deposits in Canada through the heartland of America to oil refineries on the Gulf Coast. Industry groups say the pipeline would create construction jobs, but many activists say the environmental costs outweigh those benefits.

On a conference call with reporters Tuesday before the President’s announcement, newly elected Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said she had signed on as a co-sponsor of the bill and expected her Republican counterparts from across the country to support it.

“It’s a jobs bill, it’s an infrastructure bill. I think it’s a win win all around for the country,” Capito said.

“It’s been talked about for years and its time that we go ahead and move this forward. We need to grow energy jobs around the country and certainly in the state of West Virginia.”

West Virginia’s only Democratic representative in Washington, Sen. Joe Manchin, said in a written statement he was disappointed in the President’s stance.

“His decision to veto such a commonsense bill prior to the unfolding of regular congressional order and the offering of amendments appears premature,” Manchin said, “and does little to mitigate the congressional gridlock.”

Manchin also co-sponsored a bill to approve the proposed pipeline.

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