LOL: Cornel West Thinks Gavin Newsom Has a White Supremacist Mindset
Transgender Charged After Shooting at Border Patrol in New Hampshire
Democrats Will Lose Their Minds After JD Vance's Announcement About Minnesota Fraud
Chinese Official Thought ChatGPT Was Private – Now We Know How China Silences...
Democrats Push 'Death With Dignity' on the Dairy State
Rocket Mortgage Announces Partnership With Compass to Make Trump's Home Affordability Agen...
Following Backlash, Pro-Abortion Professor Withdraws From Notre Dame Appointment
Utah Proposal for Citizen Carry Puts Pro-Teams in Crosshairs
Cuban Coast Guard Kills Four, Injures Six on Florida-Registered Speed Boat
Rep. Wesley Hunt Slams Gavin Newsom For His Racist Comments: 'You're Not Like...
If This CA City Elects This Man, It Will Be a New Low...
‘Tax the Jews’ Chants Erupt at San Francisco Mayor’s Tax Reform Press Conference
SCOTUSblog Co-Founder Convicted of Tax and Mortgage Fraud
Report: No Deal yet Between U.S. and Iran Over Nuclear Weapons
Former Air Force Pilot Arrested Over Allegations That He Trained Chinese Military Pilots
OPINION

Sen. Kyl Forecasts Dem Floor Strategy

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Sen. Kyl Forecasts Dem Floor Strategy

Republican Whip Sen. Jon Kyl (R.-Ariz.) predicted Democrats would soon pass an expensive war spending bill knowing President Bush would veto in order to help their election prospects in November.

Advertisement

By doing this, Democrats “get the political benefit of a presidential veto and then say we would love to spend all the money, but the president wouldn’t let us,” Kyl said on a conference call Monday afternoon.

The Senate Appropriations Committee is scheduled to mark up a supplemental war spending bill Thursday. Democrats are making a push to include $11 billion extra in unemployment benefits and $1 billion more for education funding for war veterans.

“Extension of unemployment compensation has nothing to do with defense spending, it’s something the Democrats want to put on just about every bill they can,” Kyl said. After the president vetoes the bill Kyl expects a “clean” one will be passed later and sent for to the president’s desk for his approval.

Kyl predicted the Democrats may pursue a similar strategy of introducing unacceptable bill for cap-and-trade legislation, although there is not enough time on the calendar to debate such a broad-reaching law. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Joe Lieberman (I.-Conn.) and Sen. John Warner (R.-Va.) to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through a cap-and-trade system, is likely to come to the floor in June.

Advertisement

Kyl said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-Nev.) would use the truncated timetable against Republicans. Kyl said Reid could quickly file for cloture and then “blame them [Republicans] for filibustering the bill.”

“I have a very hard time believing at the end of the day it would pass,” Kyl said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement