ap

Skip to content

U.S. House refuses to override Trump veto of bill that would’ve helped fund Colorado water pipeline

Rep. Lauren Boebert, who sponsored bill, pushed president in November to release Jeffrey Epstein files

Nick Coltrain - Staff portraits in The Denver Post studio on October 5, 2022. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House refused Thursday to override President Donald Trump’s — including one that would help pay for a water pipeline in Colorado — as Republicans stuck with the president despite their prior support for the measures.

Congress can override a veto with support from two-thirds of the members of the House and the Senate. The threshold is rarely reached. In this case, Republicans opted to avoid a fight in an election year over bills with little national significance, with most GOP members voting to sustain the vetoes. The two vetoes were the first of Trump’s second term.

One bill was designed to help local communities finance the construction of a pipeline to provide water to tens of thousands in southeastern Colorado. The other designated a site in Everglades National Park as a part of the Miccosukee Indian Reservation.

Trump vetoes bill to fund pipeline to bring clean water to southeast Colorado

On the Colorado bill, 35 Republicans sided with Democrats in voting for an override -- with all members of the state's delegation from both parties supporting an override. On the Florida bill, only 24 Republicans voted for the override.

The White House did not issue any veto threats prior to passage of the bills, so Trump’s scathing comments in his recent veto message came as a surprise to sponsors of the legislation. Ultimately, his vetoes had the backers who had opposed the presidentap positions on other issues.

The water pipeline bill came from Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, a longtime Trump ally who broke with the president in November to release files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The bill to give the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians more control of some of its tribal lands would have benefited one of the groups that sued the administration over an immigration detention center known as “.”

U.S. Sens. Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper were among Colorado Democrats who also backed the bill supporting the Arkansas Valley Conduit project. It includes a 130-mile pipeline to bring drinking water from the Pueblo Reservoir to 39 communities east of Pueblo, and the veto leaves the funding to finish the project unclear.

“This is Washington at its worst," Hickenlooper said in a statement after Thursday's failed override vote. "Every single U.S. House member supported this bill to bring clean water to Southeastern Colorado before Christmas -- Democrats and Republicans. But today they refused to stick to their guns and override President Trump’s retaliatory veto. Rural Colorado is paying the price for these political games.”

U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, a Colorado Democrat, said it was "profoundly disappointing" that most House Republicans "capitulated to the president." He, Boebert and Rep. Jeff Hurd, another Colorado Republican, fought "vigorously" to whip votes for the override, Neguse said, but in the end, it was "just a very disappointing day for our state."

In a statement, Boebert expressed disappointment and said: "My work here isn’t finished. Stay tuned.”

Republicans take sides

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said ahead of the vote that leadership was not urging -- or “whipping” -- members on how to vote. He said he would personally vote to sustain the vetoes and the presidentap message opposing the bills “sounded very reasonable to me.”

He said he understood the concerns of the Colorado lawmakers about the veto and would work to help them on the pipeline issue going forward.

On the House floor, Boebert told colleagues that the communities targeted through the bill could see the cost of their drinking water triple without the legislation.

“This bill makes good not only on a 60-year plus commitment without wasting hundreds of millions of dollars in state and local and federal investments, but it also makes good on President Trump’s commitment to rural communities, to Western water issues,” Boebert said.

When asked by a reporter if the veto was in response to her signing a discharge petition to release the Epstein files, she said, “I certainly hope not.”

Trump did not allude to Boebert in his veto of her legislation, but he raised concerns about the cost of the water pipeline, saying that “restoring fiscal sanity is vital to economic growth and the fiscal health of the Nation.”

Hurd also urged colleagues to override the veto, saying the vote was not about defying Trump but defending Congress.

“If Congress walks away from a 60-year commitment mid-project, then no Western project is truly secure,” Hurd said.

The Florida legislation had been sponsored by Republican Rep. Carlos Gimenez, whom Trump has endorsed. In his veto message, Trump was critical of the tribe, saying, “The Miccosukee Tribe has actively sought to obstruct reasonable immigration policies that the American people decisively voted for when I was elected.”

RevContent Feed

More in Politics