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As featured on p. 218 of "Bloggers on the Bus," under the name "a MyDD blogger."

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Harry Reid 1, Fred Hiatt 0

You go Majority Leader:

On reading the July 21 editorial "The Phony Debate," it became clear why The Post's editorial writers have been such eager cheerleaders for the Bush administration's flawed Iraq policies -- the two share the same disregard for the facts en route to drawing dubious conclusions.

The editorial was an inaccurate commentary on the nature of the Senate debate, the reality in Iraq and the president's stubborn adherence to failed policies.

Your editorial wrongly asserted that "a large majority of senators from both parties favor a shift in the U.S. mission." While a majority of the Senate voted again last week for a plan that would keep U.S. forces in Iraq for counterterrorism and troop protection and launch a diplomatic effort to help stabilize the region, Democrats were joined by only a handful of courageous Republicans -- far from a majority of Republicans and not enough to break the Republican leadership's filibuster. And if the president truly supports changing course, as your editorial implied, he needs to do much more than tell us "it's a position I'd like to see us in" -- he must drop his irresponsible veto threats and tell Republican leaders to stop blocking votes on proposals to carry out this change.

Finally, it was disingenuous to assert that Democrats are using Iraq to stir voters' passions; the American people are sufficiently disappointed on their own. Three-quarters of Americans recognize that the war is going badly, three out of five support further funding only if it includes a timetable for transitioning the mission, and nearly all expect their president to work with Congress to do something to change course.


You know, good for the Washington Post for publishing this. Though Reid probably didn't do himself any favors with the Washington Elites - there's probably a run on fainting couches in DC this morning ("I just can't heep 'em in stock!") - he was clear in his language and placed the blame for this continued occupation where it should be, on the Republican obstructionists who can't break with their leader in the White House. Democrats need to use every part of their megaphone to amplify this.

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