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Democrats propose deal to extend Iraq war funding
By Patrick Martin
11 December 2007
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Leading congressional Democrats have outlined plans for a deal
with the Bush White House that would continue funding the US wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan without any restriction, in return for
a pittance of additional spending on domestic social programs.
The proposal was made public by House Majority Leader Steny
Hoyer in a colloquy on the floor of the House December 6 and then
elaborated in an interview with the editorial board of the Washington
Post published that night on the newspapers web site.
Hoyer said that the ongoing deadlock between the White House
and Congress over appropriations for the current fiscal year could
be resolved if Bush accepted about half the $22 billion increase
in domestic spending proposed by the Democrats, in return for
congressional agreement to provide emergency funding for Iraq
and Afghanistan without any deadline or timetable for withdrawal.
The arrangement would be similar to that worked out last spring,
when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi allowed two separate votes on
an emergency spending bill that combined war funding with an increase
in the minimum wage. Democrats wishing to strike an antiwar
posture could vote against the military funding, which passed
with Republican votes. The majority of each party switched sides
on the minimum wage rise, but the sizeable minority of House Democrats
who voted for both measures ensured final passage.
This months deal is, if anything, even more cynical in
its betrayal of the antiwar sentiments of millions of voters who
put the Democrats in control of Congress 13 months ago. The Post
noted in its report on Hoyers interview: If the bargain
were to become law, it would be the third time since Democrats
took control of Congress that they would have failed to force
Bush to change course in Iraq and continued to fund a war that
they have repeatedly vowed to end.
Hoyer was unabashed in his endorsement of the Democratic capitulation
to Bush. The way you pass appropriations bills is you get
agreement among all the relevant players, among which the president
with his veto pen is a very relevant player, he told the
Post. Everybody knows he has no intention of signing
anything without money for Iraq, unfettered, without constraints.
I think thats ultimately going to be the result.
The House reportedly will vote Tuesday on an omnibus spending
bill providing over $500 billion for various federal departments,
including $30 billion for the war in Afghanistan. The Senate will
then take up the measure, adding $40 billion for the war in Iraq,
and then both houses will approve the resulting bill and send
it on to the White House.
The outlines of this deal were first suggested by Senate Republican
Leader Mitch McConnell, and both Hoyer and Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid have given their approval, pending White House agreement.
The principal opposition to the deal comes not from Democrats
claiming opposition to the war, but from House Republicans who
are adamant against any spending increase for domestic social
programs and believe that the Bush administration should reject
any compromise with the Democrats. Both House Minority Leader
John Boehner and House Minority Whip Roy Blunt met with Bush last
week and urged him to veto such a bill.
Blunt told reporters that the Democrats would cave in on war
funding and that no concessions on domestic spending were necessary.
Theres no reason to make a bad bargain, he said.
The president holds all the cards.
Congressional Democrats have already reduced the price of their
support for continued funding of the slaughter in Iraq from $22
billionthe total increase in domestic spending above the
White House budget requestto $11 billion. The likely result
of the backroom wrangling among the two parties is an even smaller
increase, perhaps only a few billion dollars, less than one percent
of the budget, in return for an extension of war funding through
the end of Bushs presidency.
This is not simply an act of political surrenderthat
term would imply that the congressional Democrats actually wanted
to halt the war but were overawed by the power of a president
who is a widely despised lame duck. The truth is that Pelosi,
Hoyer, Reid & Co. had absolutely no intention of ending the
war in Iraq, let alone doing so through a confrontation with the
White House.
Hoyer spelled this out most crudely, telling the Post editorial
boardlike him, a fervent supporter of the initial US invasion
of Iraq, We have to get to a point where the American public
more clearly perceives our policy position and is not confused
by whether or not the Democrats intend to support the troops that
weve sent to Iraq. I dont think theres an option
on that.
This is the umpteenth iteration of the grotesque falsification
that support for the troops requires spending countless
billions to continue their maiming and death in Iraq, while escalating
the mass killing that has already taken the lives of more than
a million Iraqi civilians.
Another leading congressional Democrat, Senator Carl Levin,
chairman of the Armed Services Committee, endorsed the proposed
deal Friday, saying, in reference to the emergency war spending,
One way or another, there, I believe, will be bridge funding
provided, and should be.
Speaker Pelosi, who has not signed off on the final form of
the appropriation bill, acknowledged that the House would approve
the additional spending on the war in Afghanistan, the first step
in the deal. There will probably be some level of addressing
Afghanistan, she told reporters. She said a Bush veto of
the bill would be reckless.
Pelosi and Reid issued a joint statement declaring, America
expects this president to leadthat means working in a bipartisan
way with Congress to responsibly address our countrys priorities
rather than issuing veto threats without even knowing what he
is threatening to veto.
House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, a Wisconsin
Democrat, said he might abandon the effort to split the difference
on spending increases and simply pass a budget that pays for the
increases by cutting congressional earmarks and Bush administration
spending priorities. He voiced the fear that a deal to fund the
war in return for a small increase in domestic spending might
produce a political backlash against the Democrats from antiwar
voters, saying, I dont see how we have any choice
but to go to the presidents numbers on appropriations to
make clear that we arent going to link the war with token
funding on the domestic side.
Whatever the outcome of the legislative maneuvers, the Bush
administration has clearly taken the measure of its nominal opposition
in Congress. Vice President Cheney expressed his contempt in an
interview Thursday with politico.com, in which he gloated that
the congressional Democrats had lost their spines. They
are not carrying the big sticks I would have expected.
Noting the Democrats failure to accomplish anything in
relation to curbing the war in Iraq, he said, Theyve
produced absolutely nothing that I can see thats of benefit
or consistent with the promises that they made when they went
out and ran for election.
See Also:
Following intelligence report exposing
administration's lies
Bush continues threats against Iran
[6 December 2007]
Another slap in the face to
antiwar voters: Democrats embrace former Iraq commander
[27 November 2007]
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