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Tuesday, April 17, 2007
William F. Buckley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Political Blockbuster Ahead
by William F. Buckley
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There's a first-class political fight looming. The repercussions of it will be very broad. It will decide major questions of national strategy, critical allocations of authority and, almost certainly, the immediate fate of the existing political parties. In the circumstances, a great deal hangs on getting things right.

A recent poll hints at deep divisions. Nine percent of Americans are unambiguous: They want us out of Iraq. They do not want to send another dollar there, and they want the troops home forthwith.

Well, that group of voters may be articulate, but they are a very small minority, much smaller than the 29 percent who are willing to back the effort in Iraq without imposing any conditions at all on presidential authority. So that at the extremes, the vote is 3-to-1 for President Bush.

Seeking something in between are 58 percent, twice the permissive segment. What they want is to set time limits and, one supposes, corresponding expenditure limits. An American replying to a pollster might find himself wanting to continue the struggle, but wanting also a perspective on that commitment that would need to be expressed either by trimming presidential power or by limiting the sum of money allocated to the enterprise.

The pressing shortage of money for the military requires that there should be subdivisions. An appropriation to maintain a military cadre and to finance continuing refinements of our weapons will not be thought, by a congressman who is uncommitted, to be tantamount to a vote for more of the same in Iraq. But it will all but defy the resources of legislative artisans to make clean distinctions that are able to cohabit (a) with the Constitution of the United States and (b) with pacifist passions that seek, even retroactively, dissociation from the Iraq war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is a tough partisan, and he speaks pretty plainly on the question ahead. "I think the American people have lost confidence in this administration. (So,) we're going to send the president a bill that has a timetable in it."

So, the president will veto that bill.

Then we'll have the great confrontation. Can the Reid faction come up with the two-thirds vote necessary to override the veto? Sixty-seven senators and 290 representatives?

Current thinking doubts this. If things got so bad in Iraq as to enjoin two-thirds of the legislature to dismember the Constitution, removing the supremacy over the military from the executive, we'd have reached a point at which impeachment would be seriously considered. Continued...

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About The Author

William F. Buckley, Jr. is editor-at-large of National Review, the prolific author of Miles Gone By: A Literary Autobiography.

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Fear not
No matter how much congressional democrats threaten and strategize, they will never really push for impeachment. They know the political price for many Democrats running for re-election to Congress would be too high. While many Americans disagree massively with the Iraq war and want an end to it, there are enough who remain willing to support Bush. Will there be increasing ferment in Congress? Certainly, but enough Americans will oppose withdrawal or impeachment so it would be a bad idea for the Democrats to push it too enthusiastically.
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