Published on Friday, October 26, 2007 by The Huffington Post
Ending the War: Time for the Dems to Play Hardball
by Arianna HuffingtonAnd some Democrats just seem resigned to the notion that their options are limited. As Henry Waxman told Politico: “If you don’t have the votes, you don’t have the votes.” It’s what David Sirota calls the “Innocent Bystander Fable” — the idea that since Democrats don’t have the 60 votes needed to end Senate debate or the 66 votes needed to override a Bush veto, the war in Iraq is out of their hands.
But the truth is, Democrats have all the votes they need to stop the war — if they are willing to use the power given them by the Constitution to block the supplemental funding bill unless it includes a deadline for bringing the troops home. As Norm Ornstein told me: “Whatever the White House sends to the House is constitutionally merely a suggestion.” The prerogative to bring a funding bill to the floor rests entirely with the majority — which, in case Democrats have forgotten, is theirs. As for the Senate, Democrats there would only have to find 41 votes to block the supplemental funding bill.
I’m sorry for this refresher in Congressional Power 101, but Democratic leaders seem to need it. The White House cannot force Congress to spend money. Period. The end. The imperial presidency has not gone that far. At least not yet. So Democrats, who have the public behind them, need to be unequivocal that they are simply not going to continue to fund the war unless and until the president agrees to change course and set a date certain for ending it.
They need to make it clear that they are not pulling the plug on the troops — indeed, they will be authorizing bridge funding for armored vehicles and veterans’ health benefits, among other essential expenses, when they take up the annual defense appropriations bill in December. And they can make it clear that they will give the president and the Pentagon all the money they need to safely and responsibly bring the troops home.
It’s a battle of wills. A test of leadership. And a contest to frame the debate in the public’s mind.
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/26/4821/