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 Well, it was a good day for sea otters, thanks to Taylor Swift. English tests pull thousands of truckers off the road. Author of bestselling memoir about depression dies at 35. Shohei Ohtani just had "greatest game in baseball history." Report an error