Yesterday,
I asked the MyDD community for strategy input on how what strategy Democrats should employ to counter Bush's impending veto of the Iraq supplemental. During the intervening twenty-eight hours, I have learned that House Democrats themselves are going through similar brainstorming sessions. To be sure, Pelosi and Reid did send a letter to bush that signaled a compromise strategy, but let's be realisitic. When it comes to his favorite anchor, Iraq, which we has tied around his neck and which he lovingly strokes while sitting at the bottom of a corpse-ridden sea, Bush is never going to talk with Democratic leaders about Iraq policy, much less compromise with them. Basically, the letter from Pelosi and Reid was a smart messaging ploy, where they immediately showed they are willing to compromise, and which will allow bush to appear even more intransigent.
The actual legislative strategy in the House right now appears fairly chaotic. Some are considering capitulation, some want to strip the pork, keep the timeline. Some want to strip the timeline, keep the pork and the benchmarks and on and on. Interestingly, some lawmakers are also considering a strategy that, judging by the comments yesterday, appeared to be quite popular among the MyDD community: the continuing resolution strategy.
From the Washington Post (emphasis mine):
Although Democratic leaders said they still hope to negotiate a final war spending bill that the president could sign, they now view a presidential veto as unavoidable. To prepare, they are studying the events of 1995 and 1996, when President Bill Clinton vetoed appropriations bills and then successfully blamed Congress for shutting down the government.
Conservative Democrats also discussed alternatives for providing troop funding, if the standoff proves to be prolonged. For instance, Reps. Dennis Cardoza (Calif.) and Mike Ross (Ark.) suggested that the war funding be parceled out in three-month increments to force Bush to keep coming back for more.
Yet Democrats warned that they are not ready to compromise on their central dispute with Bush: that U.S. combat troop withdrawals should begin this year and conclude in 2008. The Senate bill set the goal of removing combat troops within a year, although some forces would be allowed to remain to conduct security, training and counterterrorism missions. The House bill would set a firm Aug. 31, 2008, date for complete withdrawal, with narrow exceptions.
"This war without end has gone on far too long," Pelosi said, "and we are here to end it."
I am slowly being won over to this strategy myself. It has the following advantages:
- This could keep the caucus unified during a long fight, while slowly picking off an increasingly divided Republican caucus, as we gradually build toward a veto-proof majority.
- It allows the timelines to stay in the bill, which in my opinion is non-negotiable. After already allowing Bush waivers on troop readiness requirements, if we remove the timelines from the war, then there is now ay that this bill ends the war. Not only is it the right and moral position, but ending the war must always be the Democratic position in this fight, without exception.
- It allows the entire bill, which was an excruciating task to pass through both branches of Congress, intact. If we were to change or dismantle it, which could result in losing votes on both the left and the right, then the entire process over again and we would have partially capitulated to Bush without getting anything in return. With this strategy, the fight heats up instead, and we can continue to grow support.
- As both popular and congressional opinion continues to swing to our side, it leaves our options open down the road to eventually just say "you get these deadlines, or none"
Now, there are also negatives to this strategy. Most notably, it ends up passing a mini-blank check of sorts, for a few weeks or months. Also, if we pass a mini-resolution, does that mean we keep the timeline the same, or does it get pushed back for a time period equal to the length of the continuing resolution? Unclear. What is clear is that creative legislation of this sort will be necessary in the wake of the veto. The continuing resolutions strategy may not be the answer, but it is the kind of thinking we need in order to eventually find the best solution to end the war.
So, it seems that your bright ideas are making headway on Capitol Hill. Do you have any more?