UPDATE 1-Trump faces rare veto challenge in Republican-led House

In order to override Trump's vetoes, both ⁠the House and the Senate need to clear a two-thirds supermajority. The House is expected to meet that threshold, while it is ⁠not certain whether the Senate will hold a vote. This would not be Congress' first break with Trump. Trump supported their release once it became clear the vote would succeed.


Reuters | Updated: 09-01-2026 01:25 IST | Created: 09-01-2026 01:25 IST
UPDATE 1-Trump faces rare veto challenge in Republican-led House

The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday is expected to overturn two vetoes by President Donald Trump in a rare ⁠split between the Republican president and his allies in Congress. It is an unusual challenge from the Republican-controlled Congress, which has largely backed Trump during his first year in office as he has canceled billions of dollars ​in spending, hiked tariffs and taken action in other areas that are usually handled on Capitol ‍Hill. Last month, Trump vetoed a $1.3 billion drinking-water project in Colorado, saying the local community should fund it, and a $14 million project in the Everglades National Park that would have benefited the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida.

Both projects had ⁠passed ‌Congress unanimously. Colorado Democrats have ⁠accused Trump of using the veto to punish the state for imprisoning Tina Peters, a former election official found guilty of ‍tampering with voting machines in the 2020 presidential election.

In a letter, Republican and Democratic lawmakers from Colorado warned "no bill ​is safe" if Congress allows Trump's veto to stand. In order to override Trump's vetoes, both ⁠the House and the Senate need to clear a two-thirds supermajority. The House is expected to meet that threshold, while it is ⁠not certain whether the Senate will hold a vote.

This would not be Congress' first break with Trump. The Senate has rebuffed Trump's calls to change rules that give Democrats some power in ⁠that chamber.

Lawmakers also voted overwhelmingly to force the release of files in the federal investigation of the ⁠late convicted sex offender ‌Jeffrey Epstein. Trump supported their release once it became clear the vote would succeed. Trump vetoed 10 bills in his first term as president. Congress only overrode ⁠one veto.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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