I’m delighted to see that congressional Dems have come up with a fairly clever idea — which might put Republicans in an awkward position.
Campaign strategists seek intraparty consensus by focusing on accountability rather than Iraq troop withdrawals. A “[tag]no-confidence[/tag]” vote in Pentagon chief, which Democratic lawmakers might offer on defense spending legislation, could embarrass Bush while appealing to Republicans who defend ousting Saddam but criticize war’s execution.
One House Republican predicts leaders would heed White House urgings to block a vote. But a Republican consultant says some incumbents may embrace idea for distance from war setbacks.
It would be a non-binding measure — Bush can fire his [tag]Defense[/tag] [tag]Secretary[/tag], but a congressional resolution can’t — but as Raw Story noted, this would have the effect of a) punishing the president for allowing Rumsfeld to continue to serve, despite his fiascos; and b) shift the discussion about the war “from troop withdrawals to questions of accountability.”
It’s also a classic wedge strategy: before the election, just how many congressional Republicans are prepared to publicly announce their confidence in Donald [tag]Rumsfeld[/tag]?
And speaking of Rumsfeld, Laura Rozen reported this week:
Bush has put out a quiet feeler to replace Rumsfeld in recent weeks. He was politely turned down by at least one candidate he personally called. Unknown: is this one of many candidates Bush has sounded out? Is there a Bernacke-style search going on quietly in the background?
Stay tuned.