Johnson Says Housing Bill Will Become Law in 10 Days Despite Trump's Reluctance
Updated
Updated · USA TODAY · Jun 29
Johnson Says Housing Bill Will Become Law in 10 Days Despite Trump's Reluctance
3 articles · Updated · USA TODAY · Jun 29
Summary
Mike Johnson said the bipartisan housing bill will become law even if Donald Trump refuses to sign it, insisting the president will not veto legislation Congress passed with overwhelming majorities.
June 29 starts the 10-day clock after the bill is sent to the White House; if Trump neither signs nor vetoes it, the measure takes effect automatically, excluding Sundays.
Trump earlier called the bill "a big yawn" and canceled a signing ceremony last week, saying he would withhold support until the Senate passes the GOP-backed SAVE America Act on voting rules.
Johnson said he pressed Trump again in a two-hour Oval Office meeting and is also trying to advance the voting bill, including by floating its attachment to the annual defense policy bill.
The standoff has already triggered a House revolt by conservative Republicans, disrupted unrelated votes and sharpened worries about how much the GOP can accomplish before the midterms.