C-SPAN
- A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Wednesday renewed efforts to end US support for Saudi Arabia in the Yemen conflict.
- Several Democratic lawmakers have been pushing for a resolution on this for some time, but struggled to gain support largely until the brutal killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
- Khashoggi was killed by members of the Saudi government in October, sparking global outrage.
- The Trump administration's apparent unwillingness to punish the Saudis over Khashoggi's killing drove many in Congress to embrace legislative actions against the kingdom.
A group of bipartisan lawmakers on Wednesday renewed a fight to restrict President Donald Trump's war powers related to US involvement in the Yemen conflict.
The Senate in late 2018 voted in favor of a resolution to end US support for Saudi Arabia in Yemen, but House Republicans blocked any deliberation on the matter while they still had a majority. At the time, the lawmakers leading the charge for the resolution vowed to come back to the issue in 2019 once Democrats took over the House.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
NOW WATCH: MSNBC host Chris Hayes thinks President Trump's stance on China is 'not at all crazy'
See Also:
- Lawmakers are desperate to avoid another government shutdown, but Trump is still a wild card in negotiations with Congress
- Trump's trade talks with China could decide the fate of the trade war and the US economy's future
- Venezuela's Maduro claims Trump tried to have him killed by the Colombian government and mafia
from Feedburner https://read.bi/2GdZPOs
No comments:
Post a Comment