House members defeated the measure 269 to 162 in a strongly
partisan vote, part of an effort by Republicans to underscore their
objections to the international accord despite a vote on Thursday in
the Senate that blocked a Republican-led effort to kill it by
passing a resolution of disapproval.
"This deal is far worse than anything I could have imagined," John
Boehner, the Republican Speaker of the House, said in a speech
harshly critical of the July 14 agreement between the United States,
five other world powers and Iran.
Twenty-five Democrats joined 244 Republicans in voting against the
resolution. No Republicans voted in favor.
After a rebellion by some of the most conservative Republicans,
party leaders abandoned plans for a House vote on a disapproval
resolution, opting for votes on three measures to send a stronger
message that a majority of Congress objects to the pact.
Members from each party accuse the other of using the dispute for
political purposes.
Democrats accuse Republicans of leaping to reject the deal and
ignoring U.S. allies and international experts who back it. Some
also accused Republicans of politicizing the anniversary of the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks by holding the votes on that date.
In turn, Republicans accuse Democrats of blindly supporting
Democratic President Barack Obama in an agreement they see as going
too far in easing economic sanctions on Iran in return for too few
concessions on its nuclear program.
They also joined with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who
lobbied against the deal, in calling it a threat to his country's
existence.
An Israeli diplomatic source who could not be named said Israel was
pleased with the outcome of the House votes.
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Boehner and other Republican congressional leaders are considering
more options, including suing Obama, to stop the deal.
A disapproval resolution would have derailed the pact by eliminating
Obama's ability to waive many U.S. sanctions on Tehran. The three
measures considered by the House would have no similar impact on the
agreement.
In a second vote on Friday, the House voted 247 to 186 to pass
legislation that would bar Obama from waiving, suspending or
reducing sanctions under the nuclear agreement.
That vote was even more strongly partisan. Two Democrats jointed 245
Republicans in voting yes, while all 186 "no's" were from Democrats.
To become law, that legislation would have to be passed in the
Senate and then survive a likely veto.
There are no plans now for the Senate to vote on the House measures.
(Additional reporting by Ori Lewis in Jerusalem; Editing by Eric
Walsh and James Dalgleish)
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