U.S. Republicans Block Senate Debate On Iraq
February 6, 2007 -- Lawmakers from the Republican Party have blocked debate in the United States Senate on a resolution that would express opposition to U.S. President George W. Bush's decision to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq.
A proposal to start the debate on February 5 failed to get the required 60 votes in the 100-member Senate, with nearly all Republicans voting against it.
The proposed resolution, supported by lawmakers of the Democratic Party majority and some Republicans, would reject Bush's deployment of the additional forces, but would not be legally binding on the president.
Republican opponents of the resolution say the measure could demoralize U.S. forces in Iraq and show disunity on the war.
Senator Harry Reid (Nevada), leader of the Senate's Democratic majority, has vowed that the Democrats will force the Congress to debate Bush's Iraq policy
Reid said last November's elections that put the Democrats in majority power show that Americans want a change of course in Iraq, not an escalation of the war.
(compiled from agency reports)