Posted on 08/27/2015 2:43:29 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
The consolation prize in the great Senate GOP sellout on the Iran deal was supposed to be the opportunity it created to embarrass Obama. The fear was that if Republicans insisted on two-thirds approval of the deal for ratification, as the Constitution’s Treaty Clause requires, King Barack would simply reassure the public that this wasn’t technically a treaty and proceed to implement the agreement under his own executive authority. Heads he wins, tails you lose. That’s life in post-republic America. (And if you like that model, wait until President Trump is sworn in.) So Bob Corker and McConnell decided to try to wring a PR victory out of the process instead. They’d offer a resolution of disapproval of the deal, which Obama could veto once it passed, and then try to override the veto with 67 votes.
They’d almost certainly lose that override vote, but the process would free a bunch of hawkish Democrats to vote with the GOP, knowing that their votes were largely symbolic and wouldn’t really interfere with Obama’s plans. “We proved that the opposition to this agreement is bipartisan,” Republicans could say afterward in defeat. “This is a vote of no confidence in the president and the terms of the deal.” It would still be implemented, but Obama would be humiliated at home and abroad. And Iran and Europe would be left wondering whether the next president would feel obliged to maintain an agreement that drew a near supermajority in opposition in Congress. It would be another example of Republican failure theater, but failure theater to the greater end of undermining the durability of the agreement.
And now it seems we might lose our consolation prize too.
The numbers are tight: Theyll need 12 of the remaining 15 undecided Senate Democrats to go Obamas way [in order to filibuster a Republican resolution of disapproval], along with the 29 already there…
Obama faces a huge pile-up of trouble if he has to veto the bill, and they know it in the West Wing. Already facing major public skepticism about the deal, this could brew more doubt. The other governments involved have expressed their own wariness, concerned that a deal preserved only by a sustained veto might represent a lack of long-term American commitment.
Theres a cost to the international credibility of the country and this president if a motion of disapproval passes the House and the Senate, said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), whos working with Durbin. There is some harm to the countrys standing if we have to go through the charade of the veto.…
With the United Nations General Assembly meeting set for after the initial vote, the White House would much rather have Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu come to New York to rail against an Iran deal thats already on the books, versus Netanyahu rolling up to a U.N. podium to call on lawmakers to overturn an Obama veto as one last chance to stop the deal.
Per Politico, Harry Reid, the retiring minority leader, not only supports the deal but is whipping votes in favor. Chuck Schumer, the incoming minority leader, is the most prominent Democrat against it — but he’s not whipping votes at last check. This might have been an interesting test of strength and loyalty if the two were pulling hard in opposite directions, but since Schumer never intended to actually stand in Obama’s way, there’s every reason to think that Reid will deliver the 12 undecideds that Obama needs to be able to dismiss the vote in the Senate as party-line nonsense that no one need pay much attention to. (You can see a list of fencesitters at HuffPo.
Five of the undecided 15 seem to be very likely yes votes, so Reid only needs seven more.) The only real restraint now on wavering Dems is the polling. Has public opinion of the deal turned so grim that they’re willing to embarrass Obama and Reid in the name of protecting their own Senate seats? Given that voters almost never vote on foreign policy issues, even ones as high-profile as this, why would they?
Bob Corker, by the way, told Politico he’s aghast that Harry Reid and his caucus would try to short-circuit a vote on a momentous international dispute, which tells you a lot about Corker’s strategic thinking. Wouldn’t the GOP have been better off in hindsight by standing firm on the two-thirds obligation required by the Treaty Clause and suing Obama if he ignored it and implemented the deal anyway?
Even if they lost the suit, at least Congress’s fingerprints wouldn’t be on the deal, which would make it easier for a GOP successor to declare upon taking office that the agreement has been a matter for the executive branch since day one and therefore he’s fully entitled to dispense with it. As it is, we’re going to end up with a perverse sort of congressional legitimacy being lent to the agreement once Senate Dems shoot it down on a more or less party-line vote. Obama won’t even need to get involved.
All we need now is for Schumer to flip and decide he’s going to support the deal too. Estimated time: One week.
Me, too, I just made my decision 6 years ago.
It is beginning to look like Obummer needn’t have worked so hard for a deal. He could have gotten less months ago, and, the Russians and Chinese would not have cared. They would not care if Iran had a nuke today, since, it would be aimed at Israel or the great Satan. Like WWII, Stalin’s spies told him Japan had their eye on another target, he did not have to defend the East and could bring his troops to face the Germans. Why the Russians and Chinese think they are immune from Iranian aggression is a mystery.
Wouldnt the GOP have been better off in hindsight by standing firm on the two-thirds obligation required by the Treaty Clause and suing Obama if he ignored it and implemented the deal anyway?Cruz's signature on the scam makes pounding his chest on the anti-Iran deal/Obama is funding terrorists seem pretty hypocritical. Not to mention he's supposed to be some brilliant lawyer on the Constitution...The one he voted null in favor of Obama.Even if they lost the suit, at least Congresss fingerprints wouldnt be on the deal, which would make it easier for a GOP successor to declare upon taking office that the agreement has been a matter for the executive branch since day one and therefore hes fully entitled to dispense with it. As it is, were going to end up with a perverse sort of congressional legitimacy being lent to the agreement once Senate Dems shoot it down on a more or less party-line vote. Obama wont even need to get involved.
To me this is one of the most serious anti-Israel, anti-American, pro Iranian things he could've done
He has some splain'n to do.
GOP declares Cruz responsible for "shutting down the government to prevent raising debt ceiling (which GOP before 2012 election would never happen on their watch), disaster; Obama demand shutting down the government to allow Iran to get the bomb and GOP is silent?????
What's missing here???
BTW - At Steamboat, CO an event and fundraiser for GOP Ohio Rep. Scott Tipton, Boehner spoke and said he "likes how the Presidential Primary is keeping Cruz out of DC because Cruz is a jackass who keeps trying to tell him how to do his job!"
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