This Is Leadership?

By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in Comments (8) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

There exists a possible coalition in the Senate that would stand ready to help Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid fundamentally change the nature of American policy regarding Iraq. This coalition would act along with Reid if only the Majority Leader would let it. But Reid has decided to make himself vulnerable to the very critiques that are used against President Bush. In response to offers of compromise, the Senate Majority Leader obstinately declares "My way, or the highway":

Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid offered no apologies yesterday for his decision to reject compromise efforts to alter President Bush's Iraq strategy that had the support of a growing number of Republicans.

"We did the very best we could," the senator from Nevada said in response to criticism that he had cut off debate on Wednesday just as a bipartisan consensus on milder Iraq proposals was emerging. "I strongly believe we should have a bipartisan foreign policy." But he added: "We need to do something to change the course of the war."

Although Reid's strategy won him praise from antiwar advocates who are demanding that Congress do nothing less than force an end to the conflict, it has painted him as being as much of a hard-liner for ending the war as the president is in arguing that it is too soon to bring the troops home.

The Democratic leader's unyielding stance has frustrated many lawmakers, who had hoped the Iraq debate would avoid the partisan pitfalls that have stymied so much legislation in recent years in the narrowly divided Senate. He angered many Republicans when he called a rare, all-night debate on the war Tuesday that lasted 24 hours, until Wednesday morning when the GOP refused to give up its filibuster of a Democratic troop-withdrawal measure.

But Reid's leadership team has placed a bet that -- after a month-long recess at home with voters in August, followed by a Sept. 15 assessment of the war's progress from Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq -- Senate Republicans will feel the pressure to give up and endorse stringent Democratic withdrawal timelines.

As many as 70 senators have publicly expressed concerns about Bush's handling of the Iraq war. But few Republican war critics are ready to take the drastic steps that Reid and other antiwar Democrats are advocating, in particular requiring the military to meet firm withdrawal dates.

For all of the praise and hosannas that greeted the issuance of the Iraq Study Group report, it is clear now that much of official Washington's embrace of the report was fake and hollow.

Read on . . .

Sens. Ken Salazar (D-Colo.) and Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) have proposed adopting the Iraqi Study Group's recommendations that, among other things, call for redeploying U.S. troops to training Iraqis and to counterterrorism. The proposal has attracted Republican and Democratic co-sponsors. "It might have had a chance if given enough time," said Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.), a onetime war supporter who broke with Bush this month by signing onto the legislation.

The Salazar-Alexander plan is an example of the sort of bridge measure that could lure Republicans to break from Bush -- a process some Democrats have noted is probably going to be a gradual process. "They need something to jump onto first," said Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a presidential candidate.

Obviously, Reid has a constituency to answer to and that constituency demands an immediate end to the war. But it cannot be denied that much of the reason why we are hearing increased demands for unconditional (and yes, precipitous) withdrawal have to do with the fact that such demands are reinforced by the statements of Congressional leaders like Harry Reid. Yes, politicians must keep an ear to the ground and be mindful of what the populace is saying. At the same time, however, politicians have a responsibility to lead. Leading, oftentimes, means educating, and Reid would have done well to educate regarding the need to avoid a precipitous withdrawal. He might have seen the opening that defecting Republicans offered him, latched on to the ISG report and used it as an alternative policy to the one being promulgated by the White House--an alternative policy that was crafted, one might add, by a bipartisan group.

Instead, Reid chooses to make the perfect the enemy of the good. In doing so, of course, he goes against the traditions of Senate leadership during wartime:

Many veteran senators lament the bitter polarization that the war has engendered between the parties. "I've seen many majority leaders in the past, on both sides of the aisle, sit down with their counterparts and say, 'Hey, here's what we've got to do for the good of the country,' " said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). "We've worked out Bosnia; we worked out Kosovo; we worked out the first Gulf war. In the years that I've been here, we were able to sit down, Republican and Democrat, and work for the good of the country. Obviously, that system has broken down. It's just a fact."

Sen. Trent Lott (Miss.), the No. 2 GOP leader, said the week's negative effects could linger. "There's never any effort around here to try and come together," Lott said. "Comity and courtesy affect substance."

Democrats insist that none of this matters, that Reid will get what he wants and that he knows what he is doing. But it now appears that the Senate All-Night Party didn't go all that well and that in fact, it has become quite the inviting target of ridicule. And on matters great and small, it appears that Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell is getting the best of Harry Reid.

You know, it's entirely possible that trend will continue. Just a thought.

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This Is Leadership? 8 Comments (0 topical, 8 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »

Is all this anti-war talk by the Dems just a bunch of hot air? I hear them saying things like they want immediate withdrawal, even though the Pentagon says it will take a minimum of 20 months even if we decided to leave tomorrow. On top of that, you hear them saying they want the unspecified amount of troops who stay to fight AQ and train the Iraqi troops... well, isn't that what they are doing now? So, are they saying "stay the course?" Is this just their way of saying "we hate the war and we want out, so to make it look like we are ending the war we will just call it something else?" Or do they really just have no idea what is going on over there?

The upcoming Senate debates over Petreus' report, and the bills to authorize funds for the war, will be so vitriolic, so partisan, so driven by the left newroots, that it will force Joe Lieberman to cross the aisle, and give Senate control to the GOP. Oddly, the two leading Dem candidates..Clinton and Obama, both prefer this, as it will remove Reid as the face of the Dems, and enable them to rail against the GOP controlled Senate for not ending the war.. Just watch

I may be mistaken but i think the rules of the 110th congress say the democrats remain the majority till the end of the session, even if they become the minority based on numbers.

The constituency that Reid has to answer to is not Moveon or Code Pink. The people that he is really worried about are the ones back in Nevada who vote. Reid, like all of the Democrats, are worried about the voters back home. Americans are not as liberal and defeatist as the Dem leadership.

The answer for Iraq is simple for Dems. They could end the war by cutting off funds. Problem solved. But they know that the Dems would be out in the next election, so they can only go through the motions. If they can convince Bush to withdraw before the job is done, they win, Bush loses. If they force a defeat in Iraq, they lose, and they know it.

The anti-war vote is not enough to win the White House. If it was, Obama, or possibly even Edwards, would be leading instead of Hillary!®. But the anti-war candidates are not able to carry the vote. If there was a real move by the Dems to cut off funds, you would see Dems jumping ship and voting with the Republicans to fund the war. As long as the votes are meaningless, the redstate Dems can follow the insane leadership of Reid and Pelosi.

The biggest problem for the Dems is that they are convinced that the Surge will make things better, and the pressure to withdraw will decrease. First, things are already better. It appears that the small improvements have panicked the Dems, which explains for the immediate push to force Bush to withdraw instead of waiting for September. Assume that the situation continues to improve by September. Less political pressure, and Bush buys more times. More improvement after September, and Iraq is taken off the table as a Republican negative by Nov, 2008.

If the Democrats end this prematurely by cutting off funds for the troops, they know they will be thrown out of office for a long time. The war on Islamic-fascism is our country's next great challenge, like the Cold War, and they will not be well-positioned as a party to fight this war.

The Republicans had a lock on the White House as a result of the Cold War post-Vietnam, and they also will post-Iraq if the U.S. suffers a humiliating defeat as a result of Pelosi and Reid cutting off funds in the middle of a war. The Democrats know this, otherwise they would have already cut off the funds. What they are trying to do is to scare Bush into making the U.S. leave Iraq dishonorably.

What the Democrats are scared sh!tless about is the surge IS working and will bring some sort of stability and a U.S. victory in Iraq. They can't have that happen, and that is why they are scrambling to force Bush's hand to leave as soon as possible. Bush needs to continue to call their pathetic bluffs, and finish out Iraq.

"Back in the thirties we were told we must collectivize the nation because the people were so poor. Now we are told we must collectivize the nation because the people are so rich. "

William F. Buckley, Jr.

The job of majority leader is by all accounts the most difficult political job on capitol hill. Real simply it is because having a majority in the senate doesn't mean you can accomplish anything without the help and cooperation of the minority. Taking extreme positions on any issue just hardens positions. John McCain found this out with his stand on immigration. Harry Reid is finding out that this is even more true if you are the majority leader of the Senate. It has nothing to do with Mitch McConnell. If Bill Frist were still in the Senate and leading the Republicans, the same things would be happening. People don't realize it is not the people, but the positions, that define what does and does not get done. That's why the American people are so frustrated. Well, until 2008, we will have continued gridlock in Washington. And if the Democrats win, the American people will get even more frustrated.

"But Reid's leadership team has placed a bet that -- after a month-long recess at home with voters in August....Senate Republicans will feel the pressure to give up and endorse stringent Democratic withdrawal timelines."

Given the fact that a seemingly growing number of Americans want to wait for the Petraeus report, Reid and his team are making a fool's bet.

The American people don't want to spend any more time stumbling around in Iraq. Unfortunately for Reid, et. al., the majority of the American people don't seem to want to turn tail and run, either.

Much will depend on what Petraeus has to say. Harry Reid has hitched his wagon to the horse of defeat. That's a horse most Americans would rather not ride.

Harry Reid is the best thing the GOP has going for it in 2008. People may disagree with someone like Dianne Feinstein, but they still respect her. No one respects Reid.

Now, if we can only keep George Bush hidden for the next 16 months, we just might win.

 
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