For a party that won historic gains in 2006, the Democrats have proven surprisingly reluctant to deliver on their chief campaign promise: forcing George Bush and his Republican Party to change course on their disastrous war in Iraq.
Anti-war sentiment among the American people is now approaching 70 percent, but Congress has proved incapable of action. Twice now, the Democratic-controlled House and Senate have caved on Iraq funding bills, giving the unpopular Bush everything he has demanded. Now the
Democrats are reportedly ready to tackle this Sisyphean task once again tomorrow, when they consider a fresh $50 billion for Bush's wars.
Nevada's Harry Reid claims the Senate bill will establish a December 2008 "goal" for the end of combat operations. If Bush vetoes, the Senate majority leader says, "then the president won't get his $50 billion." The words sound tough, but we've heard them before.
Last spring, during the debate over the $100 billion spending bill for the war in Iraq, Reid vowed, "We will listen to [Bush's] position, but in return we will insist that he listen to concerns of the American people that his policies in Iraq have failed and we need to change course." When Bush vetoed the bill because it imposed deadlines for troop withdrawal, Reid promised, "If the president thinks that by vetoing this bill he will stop us from working to change the direction of this war, he is mistaken." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also seemed firm, declaring, "The president wants a blank check. The Congress is not going to give it to him."
Yet a mere two weeks later, in mid-May, both chambers signed that proverbial blank check—and congressional approval numbers collapsed from a two-year high of 40 percent during tough-talking April to 24 percent in weak-kneed June. Some polls peg congressional approval in the teens.
At the time, faced with a rebellion from anti-war Democrats and independents, the Democratic leadership promised new timeline legislation for September. Beltway pundits—and even some GOP members—predicted that chastened Republicans would return to D.C. eager for compromise after facing angry constituents during summer recess. Observers like me joked about a "magical September," seemingly more in tune with the realities in D.C. than the so-called experts, and our skepticism was justified. Democrats talked a good game but took little action in the face of Republican obstruction. Rather than force a true filibuster, Democrats caved quickly, blaming the need for 60 votes. Republicans didn't even have to break a sweat.
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Markos Moulitsas is a contributor to NEWSWEEK and the founder and publisher of DailyKos.com .
2 comments:
Markos didn't start out as the sharpest knife in the drawer but he deserves congrats on the new "Newsweek" gig. It's nice to see hard work paying off for a kid.
"It's nice to see hard work paying off for a kid."
It is great for Markos to be the pioneer first in blogsphere to open the door for more bloggers to be in the world of journalism.
Markos is not a kid, kittybowtie. You sound like you are collecting social security. ;-)
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