From Deseret News archives:
Vote on war funding delayed
Moderate Demos, GOP protest $195 billion measure
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., promised to deal with the concerns of some of her more conservative members, who were upset that the war funding bill is carrying new benefit programs especially a boost in GI education benefits without paying for them with offsetting cuts to other programs.
At the same time, Republicans are up in arms that they have been excluded from opportunities to participate in the crafting of the measure, and in response they have forced dozens of procedural votes over the past three days in protest. A vote on the funding bill had initially been planned for today.
"They bypassed the (Appropriations) committee. They refused to allow us to have any amendments," said House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio. "And so the voices of half the American people are not allowed to be heard on the House floor."
Pelosi told reporters that the huge war funding bill would be changed to bring so-called Blue Dog Democrats on board.
"Their concerns are very legitimate," Pelosi told reporters Wednesday. "They must be addressed."
Pelosi's strategy relies on keeping the measure free of many domestic add-ons that have provoked Bush veto threats except for a politically popular extension of unemployment benefits and an even more popular increase in education benefits for troops returning from Iraq.
Republicans acknowledged privately that Pelosi's plan to send Bush a bill clean of too many Democratic add-ons and ultimately shorn of language setting a nonbinding timeline to remove combat troops from Iraq would be difficult for Bush to stop.
"That's going to be really hard for the White House to push back on," said a former White House aide.
Meanwhile, Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., and fellow Democrats on the panel revealed a far more ambitious list of domestic add-ons to the war funding measure.
Comments
- Climate draft has gaping holes 7:39 a.m.
- Suicide bomber kills 5 in Afghanistan 7:35 a.m.
- NYC mayor: 'Too many guns' 7:33 a.m.
- November retail sales rise 7:31 a.m.
- SC first lady files for divorce 7:29 a.m.
- Jazz missing 4 to injuries 12:55 a.m.
- Pitta doesn't win award 12:47 a.m.
- Jazz manage a magical win 12:43 a.m.
- Speed skating tuneup Friday 12:41 a.m.
- BYU football: NCAA awards 12:30 a.m.
- Nude bathers cited for lewdness
- Few details on missing W.V. mom
- Defense witness goes on offensive
- BCS = power conference monopoly
- Unga might enter NFL draft
- Jazz fall apart late at L.A.
- Disappearance called 'sususpicious'
- 5 officers lose their certification
- Y.'s Emery bruised, but rarely beaten
- Y.'s Pitta on Mackey Award list
- Letters: Global warming a lie
256 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
206 - BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
193 - Palin signs books, chats with fans
165 - Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil
150 - Cougars going back to Vegas
150 - Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
142 - Nude bathers cited for lewdness
125 - Max Hall wants to look ahead
124 - Jazz fall apart late at L.A.
110
Love him or hate him, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch knows how to get attention.
Well, I did it. I gave in to the seductions of the ridiculously sexy...
Wishing you continued progress with your healing from your surgery. Glad to...
Great writing, as usual. Point well taken.
Who on earth would take children as young as the boys are, especially with...
Actually......I know that he has completed numerous (I believe up to 30)...
all this over the color of a shirt....
I am so very grateful that our esteemed and so very people conscious...
I listened to the morning news (on December 11) without looking at the screen...
yes, finally a leader of our nation that is honest and moral and... well...
PLEASE...WHO TAKES 2 SMALL CHILDREN CAMPING AT MIDNIGHT IN THE...
@Anymous @ 4:45 p.m. Ya betcha! @RE: Pangea The theory came from the...



You can be the first to comment on this story.