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After 94-1 support the troops vote in Senate
Congressional Democrats, Republicans begin talks with White
House on war spending bill
By Tom Carter
19 May 2007
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The congressional Democrats anti-war charade
over the Bush administrations war-funding request is coming
to its inevitable, ignoble end.
Democratic and Republican senators on Thursday voted 94-1 to
pass a placeholder motion expressing support
for the troops in lieu of their own version of a war-funding
bill. They then moved to nominate conferees for closed-door negotiations
with representatives of the House of Representatives and the White
House, where the real war-funding bill will be drawn up.
The Senate resolution, sponsored by Democrat Patty Murray of
Washington, states that it is the sense of the Senate that
no action should be taken to undermine the safety of the Armed
Forces of the United States or impact their ability to complete
their assigned or future missions. In the euphemistic language
of official Washington, this means that the Senate will continue
to fully fund the war in Iraq.
The resolution was doubtless agreed upon in advance by leading
senators from both parties in consultation with the Bush White
House. It was passed, without any advance public notice, toward
the end of the Senates business for the week. No press conferences
were held, no announcements made, no statements issued explaining
the senators decision, and the maneuver went unreported
on Thursdays nightly news broadcasts and barely noted in
Friday mornings newspapers.
The stealth vote to bypass debate and passage of a new Senate
war-funding measure and proceed directly to conference with the
House, which last week passed a Democratic bill authorizing war-funding
in two installments, was a concession to the White House. It was
a signal to begin serious talks aimed at producing a bill that
President Bush will sign prior to Congress Memorial Day
recess, which begins next Friday.
This cowardly maneuver came one day after a narrow majority
of Senate Democrats, including contenders for the partys
2008 presidential nomination Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and
Joseph Biden, voted for legislation sponsored by Senator Russ
Feingold setting a date for the withdrawal of US combat troops
from Iraq. As with all Democratic troops out proposals,
Feingolds bill authorized the continued presence of tens
of thousands of supposedly non-combat troops indefinitely
to continue counterinsurgency operations.
The Feingold bill vote was, in any case, staged with the prior
approval of Senate Republicans to provide political cover for
Democrats in advance of Thursdays motion guaranteeing full
funding for the war. It was an entirely cynical exercise, since
all involved knew the measure would never pass.
The American people deserve to know that the Democrats
commitment to bring this war to its responsible end has never
been stronger, declared Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
on Wednesday. On Thursday, shortly before he and all but one of
his fellow Democrats (Feingold) voted for Senator Murrays
support the troops resolution, Reid reaffirmed his
partys supposed determination to end the war, saying the
previous days vote on the Feingold bill had shown real
and growing momentum on both sides of the aisle away from this
tragic and endless war.
After Thursdays vote, some leading Democrats were sounding
a different note. To be successful, we must end the finger-pointing
and instead roll up our sleeves and work together, said
Democratic Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia. I believe
that we canand we will, he added.
Bush expressed his satisfaction with the Senate vote, saying,
I talked specifically about benchmarks, and we will work
with members of Congress to come up with a supplemental that both
sides can live with. His reference to benchmarks points
to the likely form the ultimate war-funding measure will take.
It will grant Bush all the money he wants to continue and escalate
the killing in Iraq, but add window dressing about the need for
the Iraqi government to meet certain benchmarks laid down by Washington.
Central to these is the passage of an oil law that will open up
Iraqs oil fields to exploitation by US-based oil conglomerates.
Bushs Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten was immediately dispatched
to begin talks with conferees from both houses of Congress.
Reid characterized a 45-minute private meeting Thursday with
Bolten and Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell as
constructive and comfortable. Reid reportedly
offered that the Bush administration could waive any deadlines
for withdrawal or redeployment included in a future bill, but
Bolten rejected this offer.
Bolten reportedly agreed to another meeting early next week.
According to a report by Associated Press, all parties involved
pledged not to divulge details to outsiders in the spirit
of cooperation.
Democrats have publicly acknowledged that they are eager to
get the more than $100-billion-dollar war-spending bill to Bush
before the Memorial Day recess. They are doubtless anxious to
participate in the flag-waving that accompanies the holiday without
fear of being attacked for refusing to support the troops.
The lone dissenting vote in the Senate Thursday was cast by
Feingold. Vermonts nominally independent and self-styled
socialist senator, Bernard Sanders, voted aye.
Ramming a symbolic bill through the Senate so that the
actual bill can be written by a handful of people behind closed
doors is unacceptable, Feingold said. However, he made clear
his own support for continued funding of the war. Referring to
the war-funding bill that was vetoed by Bush on May 1, he said,
The first supplemental passed by Congress was a step forward,
but I hope that whatever emerges from the upcoming conference
will not be a step back.
The same day the Democrats carried out their war-funding maneuver
in the Senate, Democrats in the House voted overwhelmingly for
a defense authorization bill for fiscal year 2008. The $646 billion
bill, the largest military spending bill since World War II, passed
by a vote of 397 to 27. It includes $142 billion for the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
See Also:
Prelude to deal with Bush on war-funding
More antiwar posturing from Senate Democrats
[17 May 2007]
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