US lawmakers voted Thursday to end military support for the bloody Saudi-led war in Yemen, dealing a harsh bipartisan rebuke to Donald Trump and taking the historic step of curtailing a president's war-making powers. The House of Representatives voted 247 to 175, with one congressman voting present, to approve a resolution that directs the president "to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities in or affecting the Republic of Yemen" within 30 days.
The text cleared the Senate last month and now heads to Trump, who is expected to veto the legislation. The White House has called the measure "flawed" and warned it would harm bilateral relations in the region, including with Saudi Arabia.
But the passage through Congress marked a historic milestone, as it was the first time in history that a measure invoking the 1973 War Powers Resolution will reach the president's desk. Several Democrats have argued that the US involvement in the Saudi-led coalition fighting Huthi rebels - mainly through the provision of military aid such as the refueling of aircraft - is unconstitutional without congressional authority, and they have sought for months to reclaim US lawmakers' constitutional authority to declare war.
"Today we took a clear stand against war and famine and for Congress's war powers by voting to end our complicity in the war in Yemen," Senator Bernie Sanders, a lead author of the resolution and a 2020 presidential candidate, said after the House vote.
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