US Congress Finds ‘Overwhelming’ Public Opposition to Force in Syria
by alethoBy Maria Young | RIA Novosti | September 6, 2013
WASHINGTON
– After three days of non-stop phone calls from hundreds of Colorado
constituents opposed to a US military strike on Syria, Rep. Doug Lamborn
announced Friday he was “leaning against” a resolution giving US President Barack Obama the authority to take limited action.
Following a long holiday weekend, “Tuesday
is when the calls started, they’re still coming in, and I would say
fewer than two percent are people who want us to take action,” said
Catherine Mortensen, Lamborn’s communications director.
“People
say things like, ‘We have problems at home we need to take care of.’
And what was surprising was how quickly people’s opinions had gelled.
They’re not lukewarm. Right off the bat on Tuesday it was, ‘We don’t need this.’ It’s been overwhelming,” she added in an interview with RIA Novosti.
While Lamborn was answering questions from listeners during a radio show Friday morning, Mortensen said, “One man phoned in to say, ‘I’m in Afghanistan, and I don’t want this anymore.’”
By
the end of the show, Lamborn, a Republican, who previously had said he
was gathering facts and hadn’t made up his mind yet, told listeners he
was inclined to vote against the resolution.
And Lamborn’s office is not alone.
Other
Congressional offices say they have also been bombarded ever since
Obama said last Saturday that he would ask Congress to approve a
“limited” strike against the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad
in response to an alleged chemical weapons attack last month.
“I
can tell you 99 percent of the calls coming to my office are against
it,” said Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland in a televised
interview on MSNBC.
Sen.
John McCain, a Republican from Arizona who lost the presidency to Obama
in 2008, voted to support his old rival during a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing this week, but took significant heat about
it from angry constituents at a town hall meeting in Arizona Thursday.
“This
is what I think of Congress,” said one man in the crowd, holding up a
bag of marshmallows. “They are a bunch of marshmallows…Why are you not
listening to the people and staying out of Syria? It’s not our fight.”
Some of those calls and comments to Congress appear to be having an effect.
After days of discussions with voters, Rep. Tom Cole, a Republican from Oklahoma, announced late Thursday in a statement on his website
that he would vote against the president’s request, saying the
situation in Syria is a civil war that America should not be drawn into.
“This
is not just my opinion. It is the considered opinion of the people that
I represent, expressed not at just one or two town halls, but literally
at every public or private meeting and casual encounter I have had
since the president decided to put this issue before Congress last
Saturday,” he said, adding, “I have heard their opposition loud and
clear and will not vote in favor of military intervention in Syria.”
Upon
hearing word about a chemical attack that had killed men, women and
children, Republican Rep. Michael Grimm from New York said his initial
reaction, as a Marine combat veteran, “was to stand by the Commander in
Chief and support immediate, targeted strikes.”
Grimm announced Thursday he, too, had changed his mind.
“I
have heard from many constituents who strongly oppose unilateral action
at a time when we have so many needs here at home. Thus, after much
thought, deliberation and prayer, I am no longer convinced that a US
strike on Syria will yield a benefit to the United States that will not
be greatly outweighed by the extreme cost of war,” he said in a statement on his website.
The
Obama Administration thus far has “failed to present a convincing
argument that the events in Syria pose a clear threat to America, failed
to list a strong coalition of nations willing to support military
attacks, and failed to articulate a clear definition of victory,” said
Arizona Republican Rep. Matt Salmon in a statement on his website explaining his opposition to a strike.
Salmon told the National Review Online
he’s had 500 calls to his office about the crisis in Syria, and only
two have been in favor of US intervention. He predicted Obama’s efforts
in Congress “will fail by 20 votes.”
But
Obama is counting on members of Congress like California Democratic
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
who has viewed classified information about the chemical weapons attack
and said Thursday she supports the strike on Syria, despite the lack of public support.
"There's no question: What's coming in is overwhelmingly negative," she said, according to the Associated Press. "But you see, then, they don't know what I know. They haven't heard what I've heard."
During a press conference from St. Petersburg soon after the G20 summit wrapped up on Friday, Obama said he would address the nation about the crisis on Tuesday, telling reporters he considers it part of his job to “make the case.”
"It's
conceivable that, at the end of the day, I don't persuade a majority of
the American people that it's the right thing to do," Obama said to
reporters.
But
he added that members of Congress will have to decide for themselves if
they think a strike is the right thing for national and global
security.
"Ultimately,
you listen to your constituents, but you've got to make some decisions
about what you believe is right for America," he said.
Obama did not say whether he would still order a strike even without Congressional approval.
Related articles
- How to Call Congress About Voting NO on Striking Syria (disclose.tv)
- Report: AIPAC to mount major lobbying blitz for Obama's Syria strike plan (jpost.com)
- Arizona Voters Heckle John McCain Over Push For Syrian Strike (businessinsider.com)
- Developing: Congress Might Not Even Vote On Obama's Syria Resolution (undergroundpoliticsdotorg.
wordpress.com) - Fla. members in Congress skeptical of Syria strike (miamiherald.com)
- Will Obama Strike Syria Without Congressional Approval? (dannyvinik.com)
- Obama rejects G20 pressure to abandon Syria air strike plan - Times of India (timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
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