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Senate Deadlocks On Bills To Fund War

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Published: November 17, 2007

WASHINGTON - Congress left for its Thanksgiving recess Friday without passing a bill to pay for the war in Iraq after the Senate deadlocked over a Democratic demand that the measure include a call for most troops to be withdrawn by the end of next year.

As they have all year, Senate Democrats failed to muster the votes to consider a proposal to condition further spending on a timeline for withdrawing troops. The $50 billion bill, which narrowly passed the House on Wednesday, failed by seven votes.

And Republicans in the narrowly divided chamber fell short of a majority for their alternative proposal to send President Bush $70 billion without any restrictions.

"We're in the middle of a war, and playing political games," complained Oregon Sen. Gordon Smith, one of the few Republicans who consistently has backed Democratic withdrawal legislation. "It's all politics, all the time in this 110th Congress."

Smith, like several senators, expressed disappointment with party leaders, blaming them for being unwilling to work out compromises on the war.

Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe, another Republican who has backed withdrawal plans, also blasted Senate leaders.

"By leaving town as the supplemental funding hangs in the balance, Congress is doing a disservice to the American people by ignoring its responsibilities," she said.
Members of Congress are now off for two weeks.

Bush administration officials, including Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, warned that the impasse on Capitol Hill would force the Pentagon to take drastic measures, including shutting down military bases and laying off employees.

But congressional Democrats have dismissed the warnings, noting that Gates also said there is sufficient money to continue operations in Iraq into February. Congress just sent the administration a $471 billion bill to pay for defense spending this fiscal year, but it does not pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Bush has asked for $196 billion to fight the wars.

The Democratic funding measure got 53 votes, seven shy of the required 60-vote supermajority needed to end a filibuster. The competing Republican measure got just 45 votes.

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