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Politics

House rebukes Bush on Iraq

By BILL ADAIR
Published February 17, 2007


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WASHINGTON - In a strong rebuke of President Bush, the House voted Friday to formally oppose his plan to send 21,500 additional troops to Iraq.

The nonbinding vote was largely symbolic, but it sets the stage for a contentious and much more consequential fight over whether Congress should use its power over spending to force a troop withdrawal.

After an extraordinary 45-hour debate in which nearly every member delivered a speech on the House floor, 17 Republicans - including Rep. Ric Keller from the Orlando area - joined 229 Democrats in opposing the president's plan. The vote was 246 to 182.

The Senate, which has been tied in knots over a similar resolution, will hold an unusual weekend vote today about whether to take up the bill. On Friday, Democratic leader Harry Reid declared that any senator who votes against proceeding with the debate is "voting to give the president a green light to escalate the war."

But the parties in the Senate are entrenched on either side of the matter, and today's vote is unlikely to break the impasse that has prevented a vote on the resolution.

Senate Republicans want Democrats to allow a vote on a resolution pledging not to restrict funding for U.S. troops in combat. Democratic leaders have balked, but they say they're willing to consider alternatives.

Friday's House vote on the two-sentence resolution records the chamber's view on adding more troops to Iraq, but it does not force Bush to do anything. The White House, realizing the bill was going to pass, did little to oppose it.

White House spokesman Tony Snow issued a statement noting the House vote but offering no real reaction to it. "The president concluded that this new strategy was necessary in order to help the Iraqi government gain control over Baghdad, assume more responsibility for security, and pursue reconciliation of all of Iraq's communities."

Lawmakers from the Tampa Bay area voted along party lines, with Democrat Kathy Castor of Tampa supporting the resolution and Republicans C.W. Bill Young of Indian Shores, Adam Putnam of Bartow, Gus Bilirakis of Palm Harbor, Ginny Brown-Waite of Brooksville and Vern Buchanan of Longboat Key opposing it.

The 17 Republicans who broke with their party to support the resolution represented a wide spectrum. Some, such as Keller, are conservatives from Republican districts that Bush won in 2004 by large margins; others, such as Rep. Michael Castle of Delaware, are moderates whose districts often elect Democrats.

Keller spoke in favor of the resolution throughout the debate, arguing that the situation in Iraq has deteriorated too much to commit more U.S. troops now.

Congressional aides said the weeklong debate was remarkable because so many members gave speeches on the House floor. They said 392 of the 434 members spoke, the most in recent memory. During the October 2002 debate about whether to authorize the war, 307 members spoke.

Congress will be in recess next week and will return the week of Feb. 26 for a debate that will be even more contentious.

Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa, chairman of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, plans to propose spending restrictions that would effectively make it impossible for Bush to keep 160,000 troops in Iraq, as the president has planned.

Murtha's plan would not allow Bush to extend the tours of U.S. forces in Iraq or send additional troops unless they've had one year out of combat duty to retrain and re-equip.

"This country needs a dramatic change of course in Iraq, and it is the responsibility of this Congress to consummate that change," Murtha said.

On Friday, his plan drew differing reactions from Republican leaders.

Some GOP leaders accused Murtha of playing politics. They said the fact that he chose to announce his plan during a program hosted by MoveOn.org, a liberal organization, shows he is more concerned with political gain than helping the troops.

"It shows the debate for exactly what it is: phase one of a political campaign with their left-wing friends," said Putnam, chairman of the House Republican Conference.

Putnam described Murtha's plan as "just a de facto way of choking off funding without having to have a straight up-or-down vote on funding the war."

Young, a veteran lawmaker from Indian Shores who is the ranking Republican on Murtha's subcommittee, was more open to the Democratic proposal. He said he and Murtha, who have negotiated many appropriations bills together over the years, are "in the work-it-out stage" and might be able to make a deal.

Young said that he is close to the Democratic chairman and that "he's not the same Jack Murtha when we're talking that he is on TV."

Information from the Associated Press and Congressional Quarterly was included in this report. Bill Adair can be reached at adair@sptimes.com or 202 463-0575.

Congress and the American people will continue to support and protect the members of the United States armed forces who are serving or who have served bravely and honorably in Iraq, and Congress disapproves of the decision of President George W. Bush announced on January 10, 2007, to deploy more than 20,000 additional United States combat troops toIraq.

Voting in favor: Democrat Kathy Castor

Voting against: Republicans C.W. Bill Young, Adam Putnam, Gus Bilirakis, Ginny Brown-Waite and Vern Buchanan

[Last modified February 17, 2007, 00:41:03]


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Comments on this article
by Dan 02/18/07 11:11 AM
70% of America disagrees with the president, 30% are either brain dead or on EXON's or Haliburtin's payroll or they are Reppublican Congressmen and Senators hoping Bush doesn't kill the RNC through his stupidity.
by Dan 02/18/07 10:16 AM
You stated "MoveOn.org, a liberal organization" which is incomplete if not incorrect label. It is a non-partisian, 3.5 million member driven organization with 4 issues: 1. Out of IRAQ, 2. Health Care for All, 3. Restore Democracy and 4. Clean Energy.
by Scott 02/17/07 03:43 PM
Wow, what a waste our time and money. The Dems seem to have their heads in the sand on the middle east. I'm glad that at least Bush has a spine. Leaving Iraq will not stop attacks on America or on democracy. We're in a war for freedom and equality.
by Jim 02/17/07 10:11 AM
Bush continues to be DEAD WRONG on every major issue, foriegn and domestic, yet the GOP lemmings keep following. Thank God we finally have some democrats willing to stand up against this machine of ignorance and greed. No good has come from Bush!
by Jim 02/17/07 10:03 AM
Wow, our Repug Reps still drink bush's kool aid. The fact that these fools were re-elected speaks volumes about "liberal bias" in the media. If people were exposed to the truth about these bozos, theirs and bush's approval rating would be 10%.
by Susan 02/17/07 09:06 AM
Bush is another "Nixon". At this point in U.S. history, it amazes me that any Republicans still openly support our President in continuing the War on Iraq.
by Colbyj 02/17/07 08:34 AM
Now there's a Congress we can all be proud of. All that time spent on a "non-binding" resolution. How brave of them!
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