Dems Struggle to Unite Caucus on Iraq
By ANNE FLAHERTY
WASHINGTON – President Bush on Thursday challenged Congress to pass his war spending bill without conditions. Democratic leaders, believing they have a mandate from voters, were searching for votes to adopt a withdrawal plan.
"Congress needs to get their business done quickly, get the monies we’ve requested funded and let our folks on the ground do the job," Bush said after meeting with leaders of joint civilian-military units headed soon to Iraq.
Democrats are divided on the issue and hold only a narrow majority in Congress. Their leaders, hands tied if just a few members stray, are finding it tough to pass legislation that would require Bush to start bringing troops home.
House debate on an anti-war measure began Thursday with a vote scheduled Friday, while the Senate Appropriations Committee began considering a similar measure. Facing likely defeat, Republicans on the Senate panel decided to postpone an effort to kill the withdrawal language until the full Senate takes up the spending measure as early as Monday.
The stakes are high for Congress’ new Democratic leadership, which wants to prove it can govern, influence Bush’s war policy and still support the military. The Bush administration continued to criticize Democrats for adding billions for domestic programs to the measure in an effort to win votes.
"Money is going to run out for our forces in Iraq sometime next month," said White House spokesman Tony Snow. "The money is running out, and meanwhile you have people on Capitol Hill trying to buy or cajole votes for a bill that’s not going to pass."
The House’s $124 billion spending bill would fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and require that combat troops leave Iraq by fall of 2008, and possibly sooner if the Iraqi government does not make progress on its political and security commitments.
But several hurdles remained. Several anti-war liberals were expected to join Republicans in opposing the measure because they say it continues to bankroll an immoral war. And if the bill does scrape by in the House, it may sink in the Senate, where many Democrats have resisted firm timetables on the war.
On top of that, Bush has vowed to veto such a restrictive measure if it ever reaches his desk.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., continued Wednesday to press party members to back the bill, unsure whether she had enough votes to pass it. In a closed-door meeting, former President Carter’s national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, tried to convince party skeptics that the bill was their best chance at ending the war.
Pelosi initially had planned for a final vote Thursday but pushed it off until Friday, a tactic that gives her more time to ensure she has the votes to pass it.
"This is not going to go anywhere," said Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif., who wants legislation to end the war immediately. "So if you’re going to be symbolic, be bold."
But some of Woolsey’s colleagues say it’s not that easy. Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., former chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said he feels the heat from voters who do not want another penny to go toward the war.
"But I’m thinking about if the bill fails, what happens?" Cummings said. "If the bill fails, we start from scratch."
Democrats then would be forced to pass spending legislation without the deadlines, whereas the current bill would at least send Bush a message that Congress is not behind the war, he said. "I think when all the dust settles, no matter what, we’re going to have troops in Iraq. And so long as they’re there, I have a duty to protect them and provide them what they need," Cummings said.
In the Senate, the Appropriations Committee bill would require troops to start coming home in four months. Unlike the House bill, which sets a firm deadline for combat operations to cease, the $122 billion Senate bill identifies a nonbinding goal of getting troops out by March 31, 2008.
Both the House and Senate measures would allow an unspecified number of troops to be left behind to conduct anti-terror missions, train Iraqi forces and protect U.S. diplomatic personnel and infrastructure. Of the more than 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, fewer than half are combat forces.
The Senate bill is similar to a resolution rejected last week. It failed on a 50-48 procedural vote, falling 12 votes shy of the 60 needed to move forward to final vote.
But Democrats think the spending legislation has a better chance of passing. Sen. Ben Nelson ,who voted against last week’s resolution, has agreed to support the spending legislation because of language added outlining benchmarks for the Iraqi government.
Nelson, D-Neb., opposes arbitrary deadlines to end the war, but wanted legislation that would put pressure on the Iraqi government to take more responsibility.
Republican leaders and the White House say they will reject the bill.
