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stanley mug of the Keystone XL pipeline were able to secure enough votes to pass a bill to begin construction on the pipeline Thursday, though they still fall short of the 67 that would be needed to override a presidential veto.The bill passed with 62 votes Thursday after days of votes on amendments to end the measure. The House, which passed its own bill to fast track construction of the pipeline in January, must either pass the Senate version or reconcile the two bills before legislation can be sent to the White House.President Obama has promised to veto the bill, questioning the number of jobs it would create and saying the State Department s
stanley website hould have time to finish its review of the pipeline. The bill also did not get enough votes in the House to get past the two-thirds threshold necessary to overturn a veto.House passes Keystone bill We re hoping the president, upon reflection, will agree to sign onto a bill that State Department says could create up to 42,000 jobs, his State Department says creates little or no impact on the environment, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, said Thursday. The State Department has also said that fewer than 40 people would be employed long-term to support the pipeline, a statistic frequently cited by the bill s opponents. That was the argument of Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-New York, at a press conference ahead of the vote Thursday.
stanley cup Zhzk Jeff Flake discusses allegations against Brett Kavanaugh on Senate floor
This story was written By CBSNews s Jennifer HoarOn his way to being sworn in on his first day in Congress, Rep. Adam Putnam,
stanley quencher R-Fla., was stopped
stanley cup on the East side of the Capitol. Where d you get that pin, son he was asked by a Capitol police officer. With his red hair, fair skin and the youthful looks of a college freshman, Putnam, now 33, told the officer, I worked very hard to get this pin, sir. Putnam says that encounter was the first of many, both adorned and unadorned with his Congressional pin, when he would be asked to identify himself to police officers on the Hill. Similarly, last week, Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., was stopped by security while entering a House office building, her lapel pin absent. Yet McKinney refused to pause when asked and a confrontation with an officer, in which she alleges to have been touched inappropriately, ensued. Shortly thereafter, she claimed that she was being singled out, even racially profiled, by the police. This whole incident was instigated by the inappropriate touching and stopping of me ndash; a female, black, progressive Co
vaso stanley ngresswoman, McKinney said at a press conference last Friday. Yet Putnam, and others, contest this characterization of McKinney s incident as a racially-motivated one. I ve been stopped because of my young age, but I don t believe that is age discrimination, Putnam explains. I d bet dollars to donuts that I ve been stopped more times than Con