My War Will Go On
David Weigel | May 22, 2007, 2:50pm
The Democratic Congress is ducking a fight over Iraq withdrawal and working on a
watered-down war funding bill.Speaker Nancy Pelosi will present a plan to House Democrats for a war funding bill that won't include a timeline for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq but will feature benchmarks with consequences, according to Democratic leadership aides.The bill also would raise the minimum wage to $7.25 per hour from $5.15 per hour, and fund other domestic spending programs, which were still being negotiated.
... Leadership aides said the benchmarks would be tied to Iraq reconstruction aid and would require President Bush to present to Congress 18 reports before August.
Great plan: The White House may not answer the subpoenas coming out of Congress, but it'll surely file 18 timely
reports.
Over at RedState, Mark I (not be confused with Deep Purple Mark I, the soulful artists who gave the world "Hush") is
ready to declare victory over the real enemies: Nancy Pelosi, anonymous Democratic sources, and some birds.
rob | May 23, 2007, 10:44am | #
"The bill cuts off funding after September 30... This is a supplemental. The sunset dates in those bills are whatever is written into the bill." - joe
Which just happens, coincidentally, to be the same date as the end of the FY? C'mon, what are the odds on that being a stunning coincidence vs. a FY consideration?
I'd love to wager $50 against each of joe's predictions:
1. "There are enough Republicans ready to jump ship as soon as 'the Surge' has officially failed to stop a fillibuster, and probably to override a veto." - joe
I'd say there's at LEAST a 50% shot that enough Republicans won't jump ship, regardless of whether the surge is considered a failure or not. A filibuster is a tough thing to maintain, and the Congress (Senate ESPECIALLY) isn't overwhelmingly Democrat enough to pull this off. (Technical point: BTW, a filibuster is not what overrides a presidential veto.)
2. "we'll see Congress pass a bill mandating the end of the war"
I'd give that about a 10% chance of happening. In other words, if the weatherman said there was a 10% chance of rain I wouldn't even carry an umbrella.
3. "when enough Republicans are willing to join the entirety of the Democratic caucus in ending it that they can make their decision stick."
I'd say this has MAYBE a 20% chance - the overwhelming likelihood is that there will never be enough Repubs willing to join Dems on the Iraq War. The two parties have made the war the most divisive issue since abortion. There's a far higher likelihood that the Dems will come around to the Repub viewpoint on the 2d Amendment than that they'll get together on the Iraq War - and I wouldn't hold my breath for either.
joe | May 23, 2007, 1:45pm | #
"Which just happens, coincidentally, to be the same date as the end of the FY? C'mon, what are the odds on that being a stunning coincidence vs. a FY consideration?"
No, not a coincidence. As I wrote before, I think they are planning on significant Republican defections come September.
I wouldn't bet on #1 - that's my reading of the thought process behind this bill. As the last bill demonstrates, the capacity of Republicans who have come to recognize that this is debacle to be cowed by cheap rhetoric and party discipline should not be underestimated.
"the overwhelming likelihood is that there will never be enough Repubs willing to join Dems on the Iraq War."
Actually, a number of Republicans joined the Democrats last time, and the momentum is all in one direction.
The Democratic leadership wants the political cover of being able to claim a bipartisan bill. They think they will be able to get it in September.
As rob points out, though, they may not.
"The two parties have made the war the most divisive issue since abortion."
No, one of the parties made the war the most divisive issue since abortion. The other party bent over backwards for years to minimize partisan difference.
Remember Karl Rove's speech after 9/11 vs. Tom Daschle's "change the subject to health care" strategy?
rob | May 23, 2007, 3:56pm | #
"No, not a coincidence. As I wrote before, I think they are planning on significant Republican defections come September." - joe
Hmmm... the fact that they're putting in a date that happens at exactly the end of the FY is just a coincidence, though?
"I wouldn't bet on #1 - that's my reading of the thought process behind this bill. As the last bill demonstrates, the capacity of Republicans who have come to recognize that this is debacle to be cowed by cheap rhetoric and party discipline should not be underestimated." - joe
Ah, so your prediction, though written as though it was "future history," should have had a big asterisk next to it... Y'know, like, if Marty McFly doesn't get his Mom & Dad together in "Back To The Future."
"Actually, a number of Republicans joined the Democrats last time, and the momentum is all in one direction." - joe
Yup. That's what's needed. Momentum. Like that Kerry/Edwards campaign. How many Repubs crossed the aisle on the war last time?
"The Democratic leadership wants the political cover of being able to claim a bipartisan bill. They think they will be able to get it in September. As rob points out, though, they may not." - joe
Again with te asterisk. In fact, it might not happen in this lifetime... momentum or not. I have occasionally noticed a certain amount of inertia between the parties that doesn't seem to allow for a lot of shifting. (Unless it's a complete polarity shift, in which the Dems and Repubs trade places entirely.)
"No, one of the parties made the war the most divisive issue since abortion. The other party bent over backwards for years to minimize partisan difference." - joe
Two to tango, joe, and they both use the War for as many political points as they can score with it - only you could be surprised by this, because you truly sell the idea that one of those parties represents all that is good and decent in the world and the other is all that is Evil, and enjoys regularly bludgeoning kittens with a canoe paddle.
"Remember Karl Rove's speech after 9/11 vs. Tom Daschle's 'change the subject to health care' strategy?" - joe
Yeah, it was rank (by which I mean stinky) political maneuvering by both sides. Why do you mention it?