[Peace-discuss] Democrats Back Bad Wars, Big Banks

C. G. Estabrook galliher at illinois.edu
Wed Jun 17 13:12:46 CDT 2009


[In the text below, "disappointing" should be replaced with "criminal." --CGE]


	Published on Wednesday, June 17, 2009 by The Nation
	All But 32 House Dems Back Bad Wars, Big Banks
	by John Nichols

Thirty-two Democrats broke with the Obama administration and House Democratic 
leaders Tuesday to oppose a $106 billion supplemental appropriation to maintain 
the occupation of Iraq, surge more troops into the quagmire that is Afghanistan 
and fund the International Monetary Funds anti-social policies of forcing 
developing countries to sacrifice programs for the poor in order to bail out big 
banks.

But that wasn't enough to block approval of the measure.

The final vote was 226 in favor of the supplemental, 202 against.

The bill passed with Democratic votes -- 221 Democrats backed it, along with 5 
Republicans.

The spending scheme was opposed by 170 Republicans. Most, although not all of 
the Republican "no" votes were cast for the wrong reasons of knee-jerk 
opposition to the Obama administration, foreign aid and environmental programs. 
(There were the usual exceptions, such as Ron Paul of Texas. John Duncan of 
Tennessee and Walter Jones of North Carolina.)

Joining the Republicans in voting "no" were the 32 Democrats, many of the them 
closely associated with Progressive Democrats of America, which aggressively 
lobbied against the supplemental.

The Democrats who broke with the administration were:

Arizona's Raul Grijalva.
Californian's Sam Farr, Bob Filner, Barbara Lee, Zoe Lofgren, Brad Sherman, 
Jackie Speier, Pete Stark, Maxine Waters, Diane Watson and Lynn Woolsey.

Colorado's Jared Polis.

Florida's Alan Grayson.

Maine's Mike Michaud and Chellie Pingree.

Maryland's Donna Edwards.

Massachusetts' Michael Capuano, Jim McGovern, John Tierney and Nikki Tsongas.

Michigan's John Conyers.

Minnesota's Keith Ellison.

New Hampshire's Carol Shea-Porter.

New Jersey's Donald Payne.

New York's Eric Massa and Jose Serrano.

Ohioans Marcy Kaptur and Dennis Kucinich.

Texan Lloyd Doggett.

Vermont's Peter Welch.

Wisconsin's Tammy Baldwin.

Notable names on the list of "no" votes are those of new members, such as 
California's Speier, Colorado's Polis, Maine's Pingree, Maryland's Edwards, 
Minnesota's Ellison, New Hampshire's Shea-Porter, New York's Massa and Vermont's 
Welch, House freshmen and sophomores who resisted intense pressure on newer 
members -- who may still be looking for leadership assistance when it comes to 
committee assignments and reelection races -- to vote the administration line.

Their opposition to the an exceptionally bad proposal was appropriate -- and 
perhaps even heroic in the face of threats by the administration and House 
leaders. But it was not sufficient to block an initiative that extends wars and 
global poverty.

Dozens of Democrats who were elected on anti-war platforms -- including 19 
caucus members who opposed the supplemental when an earlier version came before 
the House in May -- cast disappointing votes. And those disappointing votes have 
consequences. Among the disappointing Democrats who caved to the pressure to 
"back the president" were members who have usually been in the anti-war camp, 
such as Hawaii's Neil Abercrombie and Illinoisan Jesse Jackson Jr. and Jan 
Schakowsky, all of whom were early and enthusiastic backers of Obama's 
presidential campaign.

Now, they are backers of Obama's wars. Indeed, as Jane Hamsher, who waged a 
spirited campaign to get Democrats to oppose the supplemental observed after the 
overwhelming majority fell in line with another misguided president: "Yeah. It's 
a Democratic war now."

It's also the Democrats bailout of some of the biggest banks in Europe. Those 
banks are in financial trouble because they made risky -- and ultimately 
unsustainable -- loans in Eastern Europe. But, with an assist from the Obama 
administration and a Democratic Congress, the foreign banks will get a bailout, 
with U.S. tax dollars funneled through the IMF.

As Dean Baker explains:



The basic problem is simple. The West European bankers proved to be every bit as 
stupid as the Robert Rubin-Citigroup crew in dishing out loans. The main outlet 
for their bad loans was Eastern Europe, where they made enormous loans 
denominated in euros.
It is very difficult for the countries of Eastern Europe to maintain their 
exchange rates against the euro without large amounts of assistance. However, if 
they let their currencies fall against the euro, then the default rates on the 
loans from Western European banks will explode.

Of course West Europe is rich enough to bail out its own banks, but the 
governments in countries like France and Germany know that their people will not 
stand for this sort of handout. In steps the IMF...

With money from U.S. taxpayers, the IMF will protect the European banks, thus 
allowing the governments of France and Germany to spend precious resources on 
job-creation and social programs -- rather than bank bailouts.

And what do Americans who voted for Barack Obama and a Democratic Congress to 
end wars and focus on human needs rather than the demands of bank speculators? 
Another $106 billion in useless debt.

© 2009 The Nation
John Nichols is Washington correspondent for The Nation and associate editor of 
The Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin. A co-founder of the media reform 
organization Free Press, Nichols is is co-author with Robert W. McChesney of 
Tragedy & Farce: How the American Media Sell Wars, Spin Elections, and Destroy 
Democracy - from The New Press. Nichols' latest book is The Genius of 
Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/06/17-0



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