The Senate’s Closed Session: Nothing But a Democratic Sham
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
Oh, what a
farce it was. On Tuesday November 1, the Senate Democrats pulled
a rare maneuver, kicked the press and the public out of their hallowed
chambers, slammed the doors, and for 3½ long hours purportedly took
the Republicans to task. The Democrats demanded that the Republicans
give them what was promised: an investigation into the Bush administration’s
misuse of intelligence leading up to the invasion of Iraq.
It sounds noble
enough and predictably their act, which was led by Senate Minority
Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, has been praised by a flurry of antiwar
pundits and bloggers who claim the Democratic Party must finally
be warming up to their side of the war question.
But just because
something sounds noble, doesn’t mean it is.
Writing for
The Nation online, John Nichols opined, "Remarkable
as it may sound, there is reason to believe that Congressional Democrats
may finally be waking from their long slumber and stirring into
a functional opposition party ... [Reid] merits the high praise
of being referred to not as a Democrat or a Republican but as the
leader of the opposition that this country has so sorely needed."
Opposition
to what? Calling for an investigation into how the Bush administration
manipulated the public (forget that the Democratic leadership throughout
the1990s up until, well, November 1, were propagating the same lies
about Saddam’s threat) isn’t called "leadership," let
alone the makings of "functional opposition party," as
Nichols believes. It was all just a silly ruse. The Democrats certainly
know how the Republicans misrepresented and inflated intelligence
about Saddam’s WMD.
But there is
a much bigger charade going on here that most have missed: despite
their newly found tenacity, the Democrats still have not
taken a sound position on the war in Iraq.
The grassroots
of the Party if their trendy blog DailyKos is an accurate
sample have missed the boat on this fact entirely. As a popular
DK blogger by the name of Hunter, exclaimed jovially, "In
a move worthy of a Wild West gunfight, Minority Leader Harry Reid
changed the political landscape on a dime, and cleaved the Republican
talking point brigades into shards and splinters. This move was
political brilliance on more fronts than I can count."
What a crock.
Even though the Democrats have allegedly changed their tune on pre-war
intelligence, it doesn’t mean a whole hell of a lot, even if Hunter
et al. say so. And if an investigation is ever honestly waged (not
likely) you can forget about it meaning anything more than just
another blow to Bush’s already plunging popularity. But Bush’s poll
figures, up or down, good or bad, isn’t going to bring the troops
home. Nope, even if the Dems somehow expose the bipartisan lies
that led to the Iraq invasion, the current occupation will still
rage on. And even if the Dems take back the House and Senate in
2006, thanks in part to their latest political stunt, there won’t
be an exit strategy in place. The Democrats are so pitifully predictable
that they’ll simply say that since our troops are there now, we
can’t just "cut and run." How is this any different than
the Democrat’s weak position before their Senate close out?
It’s
not.
What Senator
Harry Reid and the other Senate Dems pulled wasn’t an act of gallant
proportions as so many liberals and antiwarriors contend. It was
just a political trick intended to persuade their base and the antiwar
movement into believing they actually are an "oppositional
party."
So
don’t go getting your hopes up. The Democrats have a long way to
go before anyone can consider them an opposition to the Republican
agenda. For that to happen they’d have to call for an end to this
illegal war. And that’s not going to happen anytime soon.
November
4, 2005
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is the author of Left
Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, just published
by Common Courage Press. To learn more visit www.BrickBurner.org.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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