Posted on 09/26/2006 7:06:21 AM PDT by Kaslin
Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) will chair the powerful Ways and Means Committee if Democrats win control of the House next year, but his main goal in 2007 does not fall within his panels jurisdiction.
I cant stop this war, a frustrated Rangel said in a recent interview, reiterating his vow to retire from Congress if Democrats fall short of a majority in the House.
But when pressed on how he could stop the war even if Democrats control the House during the last years of President Bushs second term, Rangel paused before saying, Youve got to be able to pay for the war, dont you?
Rangels views on funding the war are shared by many of his colleagues especially within the 73-member Out of Iraq Caucus.
Some Democratic legislators want to halt funding for the war immediately, while others say they would allocate money for activities such as reconstruction, setting up international security forces, and the ultimate withdrawal of U.S. troops.
Personally, I wouldnt spend another dime [on the war,] said Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.).
Woolsey is among the Democrats in Congress who are hoping to control the power of the purse in 2007 to force an end to the war. Woolsey and some of her colleagues note that Congress helped force the end of Vietnam War by refusing to pay for it.
Democrats in the House and Senate are united in their effort to conduct more oversight of the Bush administrations management of the Iraq war, but are not on the same page on how to fund it.
While the Senate could switch hands, political analysts say the House is more likely to flip.
Having lost the last two elections in part because of national security issues, Democratic leaders have been reluctant to spell out their exact Iraq war funding strategy.
I dont think the Democratic leadership should put that out at the moment, Woolsey said.
But Democratic leaders will be under tremendous pressure from campaign donors and activists to take bold steps on Iraq should they be setting the legislative agenda in the 110th Congress.
If we have the majority, itll be because of Iraq, said Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii).
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and other Democrats have called for a reduction in troops to begin no later than the end of 2006, but as Speaker, she could have significant power over troop levels in 2007.
[Pelosi] has consistently stated that Congress must ensure that our troops have the resources they need, said Pelosi spokesman Drew Hamill.
Some Democratic congressional candidates have not embraced their leaderships position of a troop withdrawal timetable in Iraq and conservative Democratic members in the House and Senate could also prove problematic in close budget and appropriations votes.
The Out of Iraq Caucus represents less than 40 percent of Democrats in the House. However, the group consists of many senior lawmakers, including a one Democratic leader, Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.), eight who are in line to chair panels, the next head of the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Carolyn Kilpatrick (D-Mich.), and eight appropriators.
Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.), the ranking member of the Appropriations defense subcommittee and the most outspoken Democrat on withdrawing from Iraq, has said he will mount a bid for majority leader should Democrats win the House in November. His bill to redeploy forces from Iraq has 105 cosponsors.
Still, Rep. James McGovern (D-Mass.), who has a bill seeking to prohibit funds to deploy armed forces to Iraq, says Democrats have various positions on the war and is skeptical that leadership will adopt an approach similar to his legislation.
He noted that his bill does not have many cosponsors (it has 18), and said despite the influential members of the Out of Iraq Caucus, we all have one vote.
Republicans are quick to portray talk of withdrawal as a cut-and-run strategy as they seek to mock Democrats on homeland security weeks before Nov. 7.
The Bush administration has previously indicated that it presumes that Democrats may attempt to cut off funding for the war if they win control of Congress next year. But the political battle over the war may be fiercer than some White House officials anticipate.
According to a report in The Washington Post last month, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino asked, How would they force the president to withdraw troops? Yell?
Battling the White House on the war would be challenging, Democrats say, but they would be emboldened by the election results and Bushs standing as a lame-duck president with low approval ratings.
Abercrombie stressed that Democrats are not going to sever funding for the troops. Cutting off funding is easy to say and another thing to do, according to Abercrombie.
Whats more like likely, he said, is to fund the conflict in a way that will end the war by reallocating money to new initiatives.
Were going to continue to give the troops everything they need, said Jim Manley, spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).
A House Democratic leadership aide said, The bottom line is that should Democrats regain the House, Democrats will leave no soldier left behind in Iraq. As long as theres soldiers in the battlefield, funding will continue.
If Democrats control Congress, that funding likely would have strings attached. Most Senate Democrats backed a nonbinding measure earlier this year crafted by Sens. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) and Jack Reed (D-R.I.) that called for troops to begin to withdraw from Iraq, but the amendment did not set a withdrawal deadline. Another amendment offered by Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) set a redeployment of troops to be substantially completed by July 1, 2007 was soundly defeated, attracting only 13 votes. The Levin amendment fell short as well, garnering 39 votes.
Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C.), a Democratic leader in line to become the House Budget Committee chairman if Democrats win control of the House, said last month that he does not favor an immediate withdrawal: I think we should tell the Iraqis that were not going to pull out immediately. Were seeking still some positive outcome. We wont leave them in a lurch, but at the same time, were not going to be there indefinitely or forever Spratt is in a challenging race to keep his seat this fall.
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), chair of the Out of Iraq Caucus, declined to comment for this article.
He just handed Karl Rove a baseball bat to beat the Dems with.
Cmon, just in a little and I will respect you in the morning.
This is the same crap the Democrats pulled in Vietnam. I'm really sick of these traitors.
Wow, it would be just like Vietnam then!
The last thing the Dems wanted to see was a motivated GOP voter base. Well they're going to have to deal with one now.
If this comes to pass then the Iraqis will be told that they have one year to get their act together. Expect Iraq to then fall under Iran's influence and that will be that.
"Cut & Run" Rangel
Some of those positions allow them to grab the ankles, while others only allow for resting hands on knees or thighs. In short their positions only differ by degrees.
For sure. We'll have to develop a special ping list.
Be prepared for the "that's not what i meant" press release after the negative polls come back.
So the dems admit that they'd chose to leave our troops in Iraq without funding for the equipment they need?! Pure evil...and then they wonder why people consider them traitors and immoral. that makes them stupid AND evil.
Is this on video? Lord, I hope so.
This statement by Rangel should be used in a campaign ad against the defeatists and traitors in the democrat party, and the ad will be very effective.
They'll lose the war for sure.
"Not gonna do it(post what I am thinking), wouldn't be prudent at this juncture". GHWB. :)
The gift that keeps on giving! Hope the stupid party keeps this up from now until the election to remind some folks that cannot see the forest for the trees what the House of Representatives would be like with the likes of Rangel, Conyers, Pelosi, et al in charge.
I am beginning to think we have a lot of Dims pretending to be conservative on here that push their one-issue mentality on every thread. Those that threaten to stay home because both parties are alike are nothing but disruptors IMHO out to depress the vote.
Kind of like how the media is attacking Sen George Allen. Any site or person that is a threat gets their (Dim) treatment, and they think they are being so clever. Immigration seems to be their #1 topic they think will split conservatives and give them power -- wrong!
Most of us broken glass Republicans are not about to let the Dims back in power and won't let any one issue keep us from voting!
Supplemental funding for the war isn't the same as the military budget. Even if all of the extra money disappeared, they'd still have resources to leave, albiet in a way that a Marine in the Korean war once described as "Advancing in the other direction".
It would by far be the most embarassing and televised retreat in American military history. You'd never get a majority of Dems to vote on a cut like that, even if some of them secretly want it, to prove a point.
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