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NY Post editorial: Democrats must confirm Bolton "to demonstrate to America's enemies that they don't have allies on Capitol Hill"

November 14, 2006 6:26 pm ET

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A November 13 New York Post editorial argued that Democrats "have an obligation to demonstrate conclusively to America's enemies that they don't have allies on Capitol Hill," but have "sent precisely the opposite signal" by indicating they will block John Bolton's nomination as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. The editorial approvingly noted Sen. George Voinovich's (R-OH) "warning" that he could not "imagine a worse message to send to the terrorists and to other nations deciding whether to engage in [fighting terrorism] than to . . . replace" Bolton. The editorial then asserted that this was not an "idle warning," citing recent statements by Iran, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, Al Qaeda in Iraq, and "former Gitmo [Guantánamo Bay] detainees [who] moved to bring criminal charges in Germany against top Bush administration officials." The statements, the editorial argued, represented not only a "postelection pile-on against" President Bush, but "may also represent a genuine belief that the Democrats ... will go soft in the War on Terror."

Similarly, on the November 11 edition of Fox News' The Beltway Boys, co-host and Weekly Standard executive editor Fred Barnes said that Democrats' efforts "to dump John Bolton [are] purely vindictive," and that "[a]ny reasonable person, Republican or Democrat, who looks at the job he has done there [at the United Nations], would have to say he's done a fantastic job in promoting America's interests there." Barnes was belatedly responding to Beltway Boys co-host and Roll Call executive editor Morton M. Kondracke, who said that "the first sign that sweetness and light is not going to prevail was the Senate Democrats' decision not to ... confirm John Bolton," who Kondracke claimed has "done a very good job." Neither Barnes nor Kondracke mentioned that Bolton's confirmation is also opposed by Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-RI), who recently lost his bid for re-election. Chafee sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and his opposition to Bolton's confirmation, along with the opposition of all of the committee's eight Democratic members, has prevented Bolton's nomination from gaining the support of a majority of the 18-member committee.

From the November 13 New York Post editorial titled "Are Dems Bolton Already?":

Ohio GOP Sen. George Voinovich, who first opposed Bolton, has since switched sides, hailing his performance and warning that he "cannot imagine a worse message to send to the terrorists and to other nations deciding whether to engage in [fighting terrorism] than to . . . replace the person our president has entrusted to lead our nation at the United Nations."

That's not an idle warning. Last week, Tehran called Tueday's [sic] elections a victory for Iran, Chavez called for Bush's execution, al Qaeda in Iraq said it wouldn't rest until it blew up the White House, and former Gitmo detainees moved to bring criminal charges in Germany against top Bush administration officials.

Much of this, of course, is little more than a postelection pile-on against a president seen as a powerless lame duck. But it may also represent a genuine belief that the Democrats, who campaigned against every aspect of Bush's foreign policy, will go soft in the War on Terror.

Democrats have an obligation to demonstrate conclusively to America's enemies that they don't have allies on Capitol Hill. By moving so swiftly to torpedo John Bolton, they've sent precisely the opposite signal.

From the November 11 edition of Fox News' The Beltway Boys:

KONDRACKE: Well, the first sign that sweetness and light is not going to prevail was the Senate Democrats' decision not to reconfirm -- or confirm John Bolton as the U.N. ambassador. He's done a very good job. I mean, he's basically been a negotiator. He hasn't been an ideologue, and he should have been -- he should have been retained.

But I think that what the Republicans and the Democrats are saying right now is what the country desperately wants: to get stuff done on entitlements and on health care reform and that sort of thing. I'm afraid that they're just so ideologically hidebound; for example, to have a deal on entitlements, you'd have -- the Republicans would have to agree to raise taxes and the Democrats would have to agree to --

[crosstalk]

BARNES: Private investment accounts.

KONDRACKE: -- means test, means test or something like that, and it's just not in the cards in the next two years.

BARNES: Look. Trying to dump John Bolton is purely vindictive. I mean, I think, -- I mean, any reasonable person, Republican or Democrat, who looks at the job he has done there, would have to say he's done a fantastic job in promoting America's interests there. And I hope President Bush gives him another recess appointment, which I think would be perfectly legal.

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    • Author by snoopy (November 14, 2006 7:10 pm ET)
         

      constructive, that is...

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    • Author by dangrady (November 14, 2006 7:13 pm ET)
         

      Using that logic, we may as well elect Dick Chaney, and put our head between our legs and kiss our collective butts goodbye.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by greekfurnace (November 14, 2006 7:15 pm ET)
         

      ...need to give up their majority in Congress BACK to the Republicans in order to show the terrorists we're tough on Terror!

      What a bunch of A-clowns. How STUPID do they think we are?? I mean really!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by solon (November 14, 2006 7:18 pm ET)
         

      Reject Bolton to show our allies and the rest of the world that the Grown-ups are back in charge

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    • Author by deeznuts (November 14, 2006 7:31 pm ET)
         

      It behooves the NY Post to demonstrate, if they can, that the Dems' victory is favorable to terrorists.

      Until they do, I'm not interested.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by redking75687 (November 15, 2006 2:44 am ET)
         

      They voted to appoint Roberts, a czarist Supreme Court Judge. They voted to appoint Rice, a confirmed liar. They voted to reappoint Rumsfeld in '04, a known torturer. They voted to promote Gonzalez to Atty General, the guy who said it was ok to torture.

      Democrats don't seem to block too many of Bush's war criminals from appointments, do dey?

      Even if Bolton is gone, they'll get a guy who's just as hawkish, just as eager to hate and to kill.

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    • Author by tex (November 15, 2006 8:29 am ET)
         

      ... have lost their luster.

      We heard about "HECK OF A JOB" Brownie after the Katrina debacle.

      Not two weeks ago, we heard the President telling us what a "fantastic job" Don Rumsfeld has been doing.

      Now they're telling us Bolton is doing a "fantastic job" and a "very good job".

      Hmmm. Translated to REAL WORLD language, this means Bolton is a DISASTER, and screws up everything he comes near. That's how this Bush Administration applies its "superlatives." That, and awarding a "MEDAL OF FREEDOM" to George Tenet on the heels of the worst Intelligence Agency incompetence and foul-ups in the nation's history.

      Bottom Line: If this administration vouches for someone's competence, you can take it to the bank that person is a loser and cannot possibly be kept "on the job."

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    • Author by Easy to refute wingnuts (November 15, 2006 11:28 am ET)
         

      Bolton was a recess appointment because W knew he didn't have the votes even with a GOP majority to confirm the screaming screw-up. So, is Congress is going to exercise its oversight authority for once and block Bolton again, resulting in yet another recess appointment (tricky, because the lame duck GOP is trying to keep Congress in session to push through as much as they can, resulting in a far shorter recess for W to hide his appointments)?

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    • Author by sportsguydave (November 15, 2006 12:19 pm ET)
         

      Since when do the losers in an election get to dictate terms to the winners?..

      Oh, yeah, I forgot..thats what happened when the Repubs won, right???

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