In response, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean said Bush was sticking to a “my way or the highway” approach to governing.
“It is time for the president and Republicans in Congress to stop trying to bully their way through this and work with Democrats to end the war,” Dean said in his party’s weekly radio address. “It’s time for the president to show respect to the American people, who voted overwhelmingly to leave Iraq.”
Bush has asked Congress for more than $100 billion to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan this year. The House and Senate have approved the money, but their bills aim to wind down the war by including timelines for troops to come home — something Bush won’t accept.
The Senate bill would require a U.S. troop exit in Iraq to begin within 120 days, with a completion goal of March 31, 2008. The House bill orders all combat troops out by September 1, 2008.
Democratic leaders have yet to negotiate a final version to send the president, and Bush has already made clear he will veto it anyway, which will start the process all over.
The Senate has been on a weeklong break; the House is out for two weeks.
“That means the soonest the House and Senate could get a bill to my desk will be sometime late this month, after the adverse consequences for our troops and their families have already begun,” Bush said. “For our troops, the clock is ticking.” ( Watch Bush accuse Congress of debating bills that “undercut the troops” )
Democrats contend Bush has grossly mismanaged the war. They aim to use their power over spending — and ride the tide of public anti-war sentiment — to force a policy change.