US President Barack Obama's hopes of preserving the nuclear deal
between Iran and world powers were dealt a setback on Thursday when
Chuck Schumer, one of the top Democrats in the US Senate, said he would
the oppose the agreement.Schumer's opposition, announced in a
lengthy statement, could pave the way for more of Obama's fellow
Democrats to come out against the nuclear pact announced on July 1
between the United States, five other world powers and Iran.
The
New York senator is among the most influential Jewish lawmakers in the
United States. He was the first Senate Democrat to announce his
opposition to the agreement.
Another influential Jewish lawmaker,
US Representative Eliot Engel, the top Democrat on the House of
Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, also said on Thursday he
would oppose the nuclear pact in a statement obtained by Reuters.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been pushing lawmakers to oppose
the nuclear agreement, which he considers a threat to his country's
survival.
Some pro-Israel groups have also been spending millions
of dollars on an advertising campaign to push members of Congress to
vote no.
Obama has been engaged in his own lobbying effort,
including a combative speech on Wednesday in which he said abandoning
the agreement would open up the prospect of war.
The US Congress
has until Sept. 17 to consider a resolution of disapproval of the Iran
deal, which would eliminate Obama's ability to waive all sanctions on
Iran imposed by the US Congress, a key component of the agreement.
Lawmakers will begin debating whether to reject the deal when they return from their August recess on September 8.
Schumer insisted he was not influenced by party or politics and had not been pressured.
"Advocates
on both sides have strong cases for their point of view that cannot
simply be dismissed. This has made evaluating the agreement a difficult
and deliberate endeavour, and after deep study, careful thought and
considerable soul-searching, I have decided I must oppose the agreement
and will vote yes on a motion of disapproval," he said.
Obama has promised a veto if the resolution is passed by the House and Senate.
Republicans
would need at least 13 Democrats in the Senate and 44 in the House to
vote against Obama to muster the two-thirds majorities in both chambers
needed to override a veto.
So, while Thursday's announcements are a
blow to the president, opponents of the deal still face an uphill
battle to enact a disapproval resolution.
Other democrats in favour
Several
Democrats in both the House and Senate have already come out in favour
of the nuclear deal, including Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic
leader. Schumer's colleague from New York, US Senator Kirsten
Gillibrand, announced her support on Thursday.
A handful of House
Democrats in addition to Engel have said they oppose the deal, including
Representative Steve Israel, a member of the chamber's Democratic
leadership.
Schumer said lawmakers would come to their own
conclusions but he would try to persuade other senators to vote against
the Iran deal. Schumer is currently the number three Democrat in the
Senate and is in line to succeed Harry Reid as the party's leader in the
chamber when Reid retires in early 2017.
A congressional aide
said Engel would vote for a resolution of disapproval and also vote to
override an Obama veto if the resolution passed Congress. However, Engel
did not say he would lobby against the deal among other lawmakers.
Schumer's
opposition was first reported by the Huffington Post. He said in his
statement he opposed the nuclear deal because he believed Iran would not
change and that the deal would let it eliminate sanctions while
retaining "nuclear and non-nuclear power".
"Better to keep US
sanctions in place, strengthen them, enforce secondary sanctions on
other nations, and pursue the hard-trodden path of diplomacy once more,
difficult as it may be," Schumer said.
The White House had no
immediate comment on Schumer's announcement, which was distributed by
the Senate Republican leadership after it was released by his office.
The
liberal group MoveOn.org said its 8 million members would organise a
"donor strike" to withhold campaign contributions from the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee as well as "any Democratic candidate who
succeeds in undermining the president's diplomacy with Iran".
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