The House voted again on Thursday to end the U.S. role in Yemen’s war, finally sending a bill to President Donald Trump’s desk and potentially setting up the second veto of his presidency.

The 247-175 vote, largely along party lines, is a sign that Democrats will continue to try and hold Trump accountable for his close relationship to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and congressional Republicans will largely line up to try and protect him.

The House passed a similar resolution last month, but Republicans stalled its progress with a procedural trick. On a motion to recommit the bill, Republicans attached entirely unrelated language about Israel and anti-Semitism, baiting the Democrats to vote for it. The Senate parliamentarian then ruled that the language would “de-privilege” the resolution, meaning that Democrats could no longer bypass committee and force a floor vote. The result was that both chambers of Congress had to pass the resolution again.

But on Thursday, Democrats blocked a similar motion. Steny Hoyer, the House majority leader, called the Republican motion a “cynical, political ploy” and a “charade of a motion,” and it was defeated.