Turning point in the House on Iraq

Knight Ridder ran an interesting report late yesterday, explaining, “If [tag]Congress[/tag] ever turns against the [tag]war[/tag] in [tag]Iraq[/tag], analysts may look back at this week as a [tag]turning point[/tag].” Given what we saw yesterday, it’s a perfectly fair assessment.

[T]hree [tag]Republicans[/tag] in the [tag]House[/tag] of Representatives endorsed a resolution calling for a robust and lengthy congressional debate on Iraq. While they’re far short of the votes needed to force such a debate, a coalition of 40 anti-war activist groups is mounting a national campaign to drum up public pressure behind the resolution. That campaign targets lawmakers as they head home for a two-week Easter recess to listen to constituents in this election year, when Republicans are already anxious that they might lose control of Congress in November. […]

[T]aken together, they suggest that anti-war politics could be intensifying – and that Washington may be catching up with anti-war sentiment across the country. “It’s making Republicans in Congress more antsy,” Republican strategist Frank Luntz said, “and making Democrats bolder and more aggressive.”

Republican Reps. [tag]Walter Jones[/tag] of North Carolina, Ron Paul of Texas and Wayne Gilchrest of Maryland all endorsed a Dem plan to force the House to engage in an immediate, 17-hour-long House debate on a resolution requiring the president “to develop and implement a plan for the withdrawal” of American troops from Iraq.

[tag]Jones[/tag], in particular, has run out of patience. “There are those of us in both parties who want to meet our constitutional responsibility, and that is to discuss and debate the present and the future of our commitment in Iraq,” Jones said. “Nobody, including us, is for pulling out. We’re asking for a transition plan for when the Iraqis can take over the responsibility. We’re not hearing that plan. We’re hearing that, well, maybe the next president can deal with it. That’s not satisfactory.”

Just as importantly, the Boston Globe reports that Jones and Gilchrest have joined Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) on another Dem proposal on Iraq.

Two House Republicans have agreed to cosponsor a landmark proposal to create a special House committee to investigate Iraq war spending, joining Democrats in demanding more accountability for billions of dollars that allegedly have been misspent, according to lawmakers and congressional aides.

The stalled proposal to create a modern-day ”Truman Committee” — modeled after the oversight board run by then-Senator Harry Truman to root out contracting abuses during World War II — has been blocked from consideration by GOP leaders for more than a year. But after new reports about malfeasance involving reconstruction contracts in Iraq, the bill for the first time has begun to attract the support of rank-and-file Republicans.

The really interesting angle is to see what happens next. Will more Republicans jump ship now that a few brave souls have joined Dems in asking key questions, or will the GOP leadership threaten and intimidate the caucus into submission? Stay tuned.

What GOP leadership? HAHAHAHA

  • I really don’t care what election-year tactics the Repugs come up with. They’ve had complete control from the White House (actually the Vice-President’s “hidden location”) for five long years. Iraq is but one result of that control. The latter-day efforts of Congressional Repugs to cover their hypocritical, thieving asses is comical at best. I believe the proper expression is “They made their bed; let them lie in it.” And “lie” has at least two meanings where the Repugs are concerned, both apropos.

  • As someone who has actually watched rats leave a sinking ship, you do not want to get between the little critters and the rope they see as their salvation. They will bite (each other) scratch, kick and do anything they can to get on that rope.

    With “the hammer” gone, and too much news about possible pending further indictments of their senior Republican brethren, there are bound to be enough of these mouth-breathers with astrong-enough self-preservation instinct to finally remember the Rule of He Who Gets Re-Elected: “There go my people, and I must follow them, for I am their leader.”

    Plus, how many of them got little envelopes full of cash from Halliburton et al???

  • Kerry’s approach ought to appeal to Republicans; after all, he is basically saying the same thing about the Iraqi leaders that Republicans have been saying for years about welfare recipients: that they have become dependent, and are too indolent to get up off their asses and work for a living.

  • or will the GOP leadership threaten and intimidate the caucus into submission?

    this question has to be asked? I would’ve thought the more appropriate question to be: how soon will the GOP leadership ask Rove to threaten and intimidate the caucus?

  • With DeLay defanged my vote switches from intimidate to jump ship. One year ago it would have been no contest, but now I doubt that Boehner has the moxie.


  • The stalled proposal to create a modern-day ”Truman Committee” — modeled after the oversight board run by then-Senator Harry Truman to root out contracting abuses during World War II — has been blocked from consideration by GOP leaders for more than a year.

    See, this is why you can’t take Republicans seriously. If they were forthright, they would make stuff like this happen. They’re just trying to win an argument– it’s not about getting real things done. It’s like arguing with a two-year-old.

    If you tell a gooper about something like this- and if they even pay attention while they’re listening- it’ll probably stay on their radar for all of two minutes, but collectively they’ll never make a big noise about it, never get their Reps or Senators to do anything about it.

  • If they really had any substance, they would think critically about their little crusades, and police their own efforts. Instead all of their rhetoric is just that- just bluster to try to crowd Dems out of what repubs see as a debate purely for show. They’re a bunch of fools following a few used-car dealers around all over the place. Meanwhile the consequences are trashing people’s lives, ruining the reconstruction efforts, making us stay in Iraq longer and longer. They don’t see that they’re just being used.

  • Wow…another silver-platter issue, brought to you by the only people who are just too goofy to get admitted to the Ringling Brothers Clown College—the GOP. These guys are just bent on rewriting the definition for self-destruction…aren’t they?

  • In case you are not on John Kerry’s e-mail list, he has announced today -viat that list – that he is introducing a Senate Resolution that outlines the main points made on time lines and threats in his Op-Ed, to make that the Senate Policy on Iraq. He is soliciting citizens to co-sponsor the resolution, with your statement sent to your senator.

    Pretty gutless for a whipped candidate eh?

    Yeah, lots more gutless than Hillary for certain!!!

  • Words for right-wing pundits to choke on
    By Dave Zweifel

    … you gotta forgive me .. I just can’t keep from laughing …

    The media watchdog organization, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, likes to keep tabs on the pontificators in print and on television and occasionally looks back to see how they did.

    The Iraq war, for instance, has been a treasure trove in providing some first-class embarrassments for America’s punditry, particularly those talking heads on cable TV.

    Here’s a sampling. There are many more at the group’s Web site, http://www.fair.org.

    “Now that the combat phase of the war in Iraq is officially over, what begins is a debate throughout the entire U.S. government over America’s unrivaled power and how best to use it.” (CBS reporter Joie Chen, 5/4/03)
    Dave Zweifel: Words for right-wing pundits to choke on
    AP Photo/Jim Copper

    Fox News anchor Bill O’Reilly poses on the roof of the Fox building in New York.

    “The only people who think this wasn’t a victory are Upper West Side liberals, and a few people here in Washington.” (Charles Krauthammer, “Inside Washington,” 4/19/03)

    “Well, the hot story of the week is victory. The Tommy Franks-Don Rumsfeld battle plan, war plan, worked brilliantly, a three-week war with mercifully few American deaths or Iraqi civilian deaths. There is a lot of work yet to do, but all the naysayers have been humiliated so far. The final word on this is hooray.” (Morton Kondracke, Fox News, 4/12/03)

    “The war was the hard part. The hard part was putting together a coalition, getting 300,000 troops over there and all their equipment and winning. And it gets easier. I mean, setting up a democracy is hard, but it is not as hard as winning a war.” (Fred Barnes, Fox News, 4/10/03)

    “This has been a tough war for commentators on the American left. … Liberal writers for ideologically driven magazines like The Nation and for less overtly political ones like The New Yorker did not predict a defeat, but the terrible consequences many warned of have not happened. Now liberal commentators must address the victory at hand and confront an ascendant conservative juggernaut that asserts U.S. might can set the world right.” (New York Times reporter David Carr, 4/16/03)

    “Now that the war in Iraq is all but over, should the people in Hollywood who opposed the president admit they were wrong?” (Alan Colmes, Fox News, 4/25/03)

    “I will bet you the best dinner in the gaslight district of San Diego that military action will not last more than a week. Are you willing to take that wager?” (Bill O’Reilly, Fox News, 1/29/03)

    “There’s no way. There’s absolutely no way. They may bomb for a matter of weeks, try to soften them up as they did in Afghanistan. But once the United States and British unleash, it’s maybe hours. They’re going to fold like that.” (Bill O’Reilly, Fox News, 2/10/03)

    Dave Zweifel is editor of The Capital Times. E-mail: dzweifel@madison.com
    Published: April 4, 2006

    http://www.madison.com/tct/opinion/column/index.php?ntid=78969

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