The Concord Monitor Online Edition
The Concord Monitor Online Edition The Concord Monitor Online Edition
Tuesday, February 9, 2010 The news you need now
Subscribe  |  Newsletter  |  Place an ad  |  Contact us
Home
News
Local headlines
Obituaries
Town by town
Politics
New England
Nation-World
We Went To War
Business
Opinion
Editorials
Letters
Columns
Write a letter
Photography
*Pulitzer Winner*
PhotoExtra
Multimedia
Anthrozoology
Photo blog
Teen Life
Web Cam
Entertainment
Dining Deals
Books
Movies
Music
Tuned In
Special Sections
(All Special Sections)
Bush, Dems end Iraq war talks in deadlock
Font size:
Comments


April 19, 2007 - 12:00 am

Moving closer to a showdown over funding the war in Iraq, President Bush and congressional Democratic leaders emerged from a much-anticipated White House meeting yesterday without progress toward ending an impasse over an emergency spending bill.

Despite Bush's veto threat, the Democrats continued to press ahead with legislation that would force the administration to begin withdrawing U.S. forces from Iraq.

"We cannot give the president a blank check," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California, said after the meeting, which included House and Senate Republican leaders.

Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, and other senior Democratic lawmakers are intensifying their efforts to unite congressional Democrats behind a single plan for bringing U.S. forces home.

Last month, the House and Senate passed different versions of the war-funding bill. The House measure set a deadline for withdrawing virtually all U.S. combat forces no later than August 2008; the Senate legislation calls for withdrawal to begin within four months of the bill's enactment and sets a nonbinding "goal" for completing the redeployment by March.

The Senate version generated criticism from many war opponents, who have called for Congress to act more boldly to end the war. The initial challenge for the Democratic congressional version is to find a compromise that can pass both chambers.

Bush, meanwhile, has pledged to veto any legislation that includes withdrawal dates, which he has said would tie the hands of commanders on the ground and telegraph when U.S. forces would stop fighting. Those on both sides agree there is virtually no chance either the House or Senate could muster the two-thirds majorities required to override a veto.

GOP lawmakers have been trying to highlight divisions between Democrats over how hard to press the White House to bring troops home. There are signs, however, that even some of the staunchest anti-war Democrats in the House might agree to a nonbinding goal for withdrawing U.S. forces.

That would allow congressional Democrats to present a united front against the president.

"This war is a travesty, and I want it over now," said Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., a member of the House's Out of Iraq Caucus. "But I put my trust in (Pelosi). ... My instinct is to give her the benefit of the doubt."

Members of the more than 80-strong Out of Iraq caucus provided the critical votes to pass the House bill last month when most abandoned their demand that the measure set a faster timeline for withdrawing U.S. troops.

Some members of the caucus say they will demand that any compromise worked out between House and Senate leaders maintain the firm deadline passed by the House.

"Everyone has a limit of how far they can go, and I think I've gone about as far as I can go," said Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., a freshman lawmaker who ran on an anti-war platform last year.

But Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif. - a co-founder of the Out of Iraq caucus who voted against the House bill last month because she said it did not go far enough - said she is preparing for the next battle.

She said she would be focusing on upcoming bills providing annual funding for the Department of Defense "as a means of bringing our troops to their families by Christmas," she said.



Single page | 1 | 2 |


 

-->
Top Jobs
View all Top Jobs
NEWSPAPERS IN EDUCATION Concord Monitor can deliver free newspapers to your local school's classrooms. Find out how.
Subscribe | Advertiser Profiles | Jobs | Autos | Real Estate | Classifieds | Photo Reprints | Contact Us

Copyright 1997-2009
Concord Monitor and New Hampshire Patriot
P.O. Box 1177
Concord NH 03302
603-224-5301
Privacy policy
Copyright policy