Talk about weasly little sneaks! The Bushies are, once again,
using the Reich's favorite two power plays:
1. Call a suprise vote on a key issue on Friday night, hoping
most reps have left for the weekend and the media won't catch
on.
2. Try to intimidate reps into voting the "right" way by calling
their "patriotism" into question. I.e., you are either with Bush
or you are unpatriotic.
CALL YOUR REP NOW:
CONGRESSIONAL SWITCHBOARD: 1-800-426-8073 or 1-202-224-3121 if
the 800 number is busy.
FROM AP:
House GOP Seeks Quick Vote on Iraq Pullout
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer
3 minutes ago
House Republicans, sensing an opportunity for political
advantage,
maneuvered for a quick vote and swift rejection Friday of a
Democratic
lawmaker's call for an immediate troop withdrawal from Iraq.
"We want to make sure that we support our troops that are
fighting in Iraq
and Afghanistan," said Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. "We will
not
retreat."
House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi had no immediate reaction
to the
planned vote.
The GOP leadership decided to act little more than 24 hours
after Rep.
Jack Murtha, a hawkish Democrat with close ties to the military,
said the
time had come to pull out the troops. By forcing the issue to a
vote,
Republicans placed many Democrats in a politically unappealing
position —
whether to side with Murtha and expose themselves to attacks
from the
White House and congressional Republicans, or whether to oppose
him and
risk angering the voters that polls show want an end to the
conflict.
Murtha's resolution would force the president to withdrawal the
nearly
160,000 troops in Iraq "at the earliest predictable date."
Most Republicans oppose Murtha's plan, and even some Democrats
have been
reluctant to back his position. Republicans were seeking to
force
Democrats to stand with the respected 30-year congressman or go
on the
record against his proposal.
Some members of the House and Senate, looking ahead to off-year
elections
next November, are publicly worrying about a quagmire there.
They have
been staking out new positions on the war that has grown
increasingly
unpopular with the American public, resulted in more than 2,000
U.S.
military deaths and cost more than $200 billion.
The House move comes just days after the GOP-controlled Senate
defeated a
Democratic push for Bush to lay out a timetable for withdrawal.
Spotlighting mushrooming questions from both parties about the
war,
though, the chamber then approved a statement that 2006 should
be a
significant year in which conditions are created for the phased
withdrawal
of U.S. forces.
"Our troops have become the primary target of the insurgency,"
Murtha, a
longtime hawk on foreign and military affairs issues, said
Thursday. "They
are united against U.S. forces and we have become a catalyst for
violence.
The war in Iraq is not going as advertised. It is a flawed
policy wrapped
in illusion."
A day after his comments, a U.S. field commander in Iraq
countered the
position of the usually pro-military congressman.
"Here on the ground, our job is not done," said Col. James
Brown,
commander of the 56th Brigade Combat Team, when asked about
Murtha's
comments during a weekly briefing that American field commanders
routinely
give to Pentagon reporters.
Speaking from a U.S. logistics base at Balad, north of Baghdad,
two days
before his scheduled return to Texas, Brown said: "We have to
finish the
job that we began here. It's important for the security of this
nation."
Republicans pounced, chastising Murtha for advocating what they
called a
strategy of surrender and abandonment, and Democrats defended
Murtha as a
patriot, even as they declined to back his view.
"I won't stand for the swift-boating of Jack Murtha," Sen. John
Kerry, the
Democratic presidential nominee in 2004, responded Friday. Also
a Vietnam
veteran, Kerry was dogged during the campaign by a group called
the Swift
Boat Veterans for Truth that challenged his war record.
"There is no sterner stuff than the backbone and courage that
defines Jack
Murtha's character and conscience," Kerry said.
For his part, Kerry has proposed a phased exit from Iraq,
starting with
the withdrawal of 20,000 troops after December elections in
Iraq. A Kerry
spokesman said "he has his own plan" when asked if Kerry agreed
with
immediate withdrawal.
As a Vietnam veteran and top Democrat on the House
Appropriations defense
subcommittee with close ties to many military officers, Murtha
carries
more credibility with his colleagues on the issue than a number
of other
Democrats who have opposed the war from the start.
Bush administration officials have been cautious in responding
to Murtha.
"We have nothing but respect for Congressman Murtha's service to
his
country," White House communications director Nicolle Wallace
told NBC's
"Today" show Friday. "And I think he spoke from the heart
yesterday. We
happen to have a real serious policy disagreement with him."
Rep. Sam Johnson (news, bio, voting record), R-Texas, a 29-year
Air Force
veteran who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam for nearly seven
years,
called Murtha's position unconscionable and irresponsible.
"We've got to
support our troops to the hilt and see this mission through," he
said.
With a Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts, Murtha retired from
the Marine
Corps reserves as a colonel in 1990 after 37 years as a Marine,
only a few
years longer than he's been in Congress. Elected in 1974, Murtha
has
become known as an authority on national security whose advice
was sought
out by Republican and Democratic administrations alike.