The good news is, the House narrowly passed an Iraq funding bill with some key provisions that many Americans have been demanding for quite a while now, including a withdrawal timeline. The bad news is, the chances of the measure becoming law are almost zero.
The House yesterday approved a war funding bill that directs President Bush to withdraw most troops from Iraq by the end of next year, escalating a feud between the White House and congressional Democrats over spending priorities in wartime.
The measure, part of a bill that would provide $50 billion to fund the war over the next four months, was passed 218 to 203, with one member voting present. It provides about one-quarter of Bush’s 2008 request for $196 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“We want a plan in Iraq. . . . We want stability in the Middle East,” Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), chairman of the Appropriations defense subcommittee, said minutes before the vote. “We want to put a plan in place that holds the president accountable.”
While there were a handful of progressive Dems who voted against the measure because it didn’t go quite far enough, the funding package included some worthwhile policies. First, of course, the spending bill would give the administration $50 billion for war efforts on the condition that withdrawal begins within 30 days, ending in December of next year. The legislation also prohibited permanent U.S. bases in Iraq, blocks U.S. control of Iraqi oil, and limits interrogation techniques to methods authorized by the U.S. Army Field Manual.
Not surprisingly, Republicans aren’t fond of the proposal. Senate Republicans will predictably require a 60-vote majority — a hurdle Dems can’t clear — and the White House has vowed a veto.
The amusing angle, however, is hearing the way the Bush gang dismisses the majority.
Here was White House Press Secretary Dana Perino at yesterday’s briefing:
“Once again, the Democratic leadership is starting this debate with a flawed strategy, including a withdrawal date for Iraq, despite the gains our military has made over the past year, despite having dozens of similar votes in the past that have failed, and despite their pledge to support the troops. And once again, they plan to send the President a bill that they know he will veto. This is for political posturing and to appease radical groups.”
Asked which “radical groups” are being “appeased,” Perino explained, “I am talking about MoveOn.org and Code Pink, in particular.”
This is all rather silly. For one thing, MoveOn and Code Pink aren’t particularly pleased with congressional Democrats, so it’s hard to characterize them as calling the shots on the Hill. More importantly, though, the White House may or may not be aware of it, but the majority of the country approves of the approach Dems embraced yesterday. The president’s press secretary, in other words, effectively called the majority of Americans “radical.”
The development to watch, at this point, is whether Senate Dems push Senate Republicans to literally filibuster the spending bill. The leadership is apparently considering it, and it would, at a minimum, push the debate to a new level.
Stay tuned.