Democrats move to exploit Iraq missteps (AP) Updated: 2005-11-05 18:23
Democrats are intensifying efforts to hold President Bush and his fellow
Republicans accountable for missteps in the Iraq war, as they seek to exploit a
potential GOP vulnerability heading into Congress' midterm election year.
Outnumbered on Capitol Hill, Democrats are embracing the little power they
have in the GOP-controlled House and Senate by using procedural techniques to
highlight Iraq troubles and issue blistering critiques of Bush's war policies.
At the same time, increasing numbers of Democrats are calling for the
president to start withdrawing U.S. troops by year's end and are laying out
their own timetables for pulling out of the war-battered country.
"What the Democrats are saying essentially is, enough is enough. It's time to
determine the facts and to hold the president accountable for the
miscalculations, misjudgments and misrepresentations," said Steve McMahon, a
Democratic consultant.
On Tuesday, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada surprised and
infuriated Republicans by invoking an arcane Senate rule to force the chamber
into closed session for more than two hours on Iraq and prewar intelligence.
Two days later, Reid's counterpart in the House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (news,
bio, voting record) of California, tried unsuccessfully to get the
GOP-controlled chamber to take up a measure condemning Republicans for "their
refusal to conduct oversight" of the administration's Iraq war policy and order
investigations into it.
In both cases, Democrats say Republican leaders have put political interests
ahead of national security by failing in their oversight responsibilities of the
Iraq war.
Republicans dismissed the actions as political stunts and accused Democrats
of trying to steal news headlines from Bush's nomination of Samuel Alito to the
Supreme Court.
Sen. John Cornyn (news, bio, voting record), R-Texas, said Senate Democrats
were going "to extraordinary and unprecedented measures to obstruct the business
of the American people. Because the Democrats have no ideas or agenda of their
own, they've made an awkward attempt at changing the subject."
The Democrats' stepped-up campaign coincides with Bush's popularity
plummeting to its lowest levels ever, with a new AP-Ipsos poll placing his
approval rating at 37 percent.
It also coincides with two other high-profile events — the grim milestone of
2,000 U.S. military deaths in Iraq and the indictment of I. Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, in a case that
touched on intelligence the president used in the run-up to the war.
Democrats say that gave them an opening to more aggressively press the
administration to outline a plan for withdrawal and demand that Congress
complete a stalled investigation into prewar intelligence.
Like Republicans, Democrats also have been feeling the heat from their
constituents, who are growing increasingly frustrated with the war as casualties
climb and costs soar. AP-Ipsos polling shows public support for Bush's handling
of Iraq at its lowest point, also 37 percent.
Democrats hope aggressively pushing Bush on Iraq will unify their party and
fracture Republicans by forcing GOP candidates to decide whether to stand with
the president or distance themselves from him and his policies.
The minority party also is using its intensified effort on Iraq to raise
money.
"Make a special donation and send a note of thanks to Harry Reid asking him
to keep up the fight," said a fundraising e-mail from Democratic National
Committee chairman Howard Dean, sent out the day of the closed Senate session.
In coming weeks, House Democrats, led by Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting
record) of Pennsylvania, plan to force the House to consider a Senate-approved
ban on the "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" of prisoners in U.S. custody.
Members of both parties expect the House to side with the Senate, despite a
White House veto threat.
A former Marine who served in Vietnam, Murtha rarely makes such public moves.
But when the conservative Democrat speaks on military issues, colleagues tend to
listen.
Murtha said Thursday that he has grown so concerned about some of the
president's war policies that he plans a speech laying out his recommendations
for the war before the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections in Iraq.
"This war is destroying our ability to meet the threat down the road," Murtha
said.
Two other senior Democrats weighed in with speeches as well over the past two
weeks.
Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts called for a "reasonable time frame" for
pulling back troops, and said 20,000 should start returning home in December if
the elections go well. And former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said all
U.S. troops should be withdrawn from Iraq by the end of 2007.
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