Politics | farm bill Congressional Screwup May Force Farm Bill Do-Over Pages missing from bill sent to Bush By Kevin Spak Posted May 22, 2008 10:11 AM CDT Copied House Agriculture Committee Chairman, Rep. Collin C. Peterson, D-Minn., calls on a reporter during a news conference after the House approved the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) A paper-shuffling error may force Congress to repeat its work on the $289-billion farm bill already passed—and vetoed by President Bush. The version of the bill sent to the president was missing a section, Reuters reports. That makes the president’s veto theoretically invalid. House Democrats tried to re-insert the segment when voting to override the veto, but Republicans objected. Now no one’s sure what to do. “We haven't found a precedent for a congressional blunder of this magnitude,” said a White House spokesman. Many believe the entire process should be repeated. But the Senate is going ahead today with its override vote; the Agricultural Committee says a decision about the missing section will be made later. Read These Next Of AI-driven Ukraine drones, 'I think we created the monster.' 'Karen' is so 2020. Gen Z has a new nickname. A Field of Dreams actor is charged with child sex crimes. The pro tennis tournament let her play, and it did not go well. Report an error