U.S. Congress has voted to override President Barack Obama’s veto of the bill that would allow 9/11 victims to sue nations, including Saudi Arabia, for any role their governments may have played in the attack. The U.S. House of Representatives voted 348-77 to override on Wednesday.

This marks the first time Congress has rejected a veto in Obama’s eight years in office.

The U.S. Senate on Wednesday voted to override President Barack Obama’s veto of the bill that would allow 9/11 victims to sue nations, including Saudi Arabia, for any role their governments may have played in the attack.

The Hill reports:

The U.S. House of Representatives will vote on the veto next.

Norman Solomon, co-founder of the advocacy group RootsAction, told Common Dreams in response to the vote, “For 15 years, two presidents have tried to protect the Saudi dictatorship from scrutiny and accountability in the wake of 9/11. Painstaking public education and organizing from the grassroots since then have made possible what’s happening now—a rebuke of that presidential protection that could extend to other aspects of the official U.S.-Saudi relationship.”

“The override action on Capitol Hill is a breach of the containment wall that was built with flagrant hypocrisy, reinforced with massive arms sales and oiled with oil. This override should be a first step toward renunciation of the alliance between Washington and Riyadh,” Solomon said. “But further progress will be far from automatic—in fact, the most powerful in Congress will do all they can to slam on the brakes. As always, it’s up to activists to push relentlessly for policies of human rights and peace instead of the current ongoing U.S.-Saudi partnership for barbaric repressive militarism.

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