U.S. House of Representatives Rejects Iran Nuclear Agreement

Edited by Ivan Martínez
2015-09-12 12:15:53

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Washington, September 12 (RHC)-- The Republican-dominated U.S. House of Representatives has rejected the Iran nuclear accord overwhelmingly, in a vote that was sharply along party lines.

The House on Friday voted against approving the Iran agreement by 162 to 269 votes, with 25 Democratic lawmakers joining Republicans in an attempt to show the lack of support the nuclear deal has in the House of Representatives. The House also passed a measure by a vote of 247 to 186 that would prevent U.S. President Barack Obama from removing nuclear-related sanctions imposed against Iran.

Congress has until September 17th to vote against the Iran deal and prevent the Obama administration from implementing the deal.

However, the deal's opponents in Congress would not succeed because they would not be able to gather the two-thirds majority they needed in both chambers to override Obama's promised veto of a disapproval resolution.

On Thursday, Democrats in the Senate blocked a Republican resolution to reject the nuclear agreement. Republican senators, who only a few months earlier vowed to muster 67 votes to override a presidential veto, fell two votes short on Thursday of the 60 needed in the 100-member chamber to advance a resolution disapproving of the Vienna nuclear accord. This means the legislation aimed at sabotaging the historic agreement is essentially dead.

The Obama administration has gained this resounding victory over its opponents, despite the Israel lobby's massive campaign to defeat the historic nuclear agreement, reached between Iran and the P5+1 -- the U.S., Britain, Russia, China, France, and Germany -- in Vienna in mid-July.



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