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Eshoo rates Iraq as `blunder,' defends refusal to impeach Bush

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  • Eshoo rates Iraq as `blunder,' defends refusal to impeach Bush

    Scotts Valley Banner, CA
    Oct 19 2007


    Eshoo rates Iraq as `blunder,' defends refusal to impeach Bush

    Written by Peter Burke | Press Banner | Thursday, 18 October 2007
    Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, admits extreme frustration with the
    administration's handling of the war in Iraq ....


    Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, admits extreme frustration with the
    administration's handling of the war in Iraq.


    `I think this is going to go down as the worst public policy blunder
    the country has ever made,' Eshoo said in Scotts Valley on Saturday,
    Oct. 13, pointing out the $10 billion the United States spends on the
    war every month.


    But, despite his handling of the war, she won't vote to impeach
    President Bush, she said.
    Eshoo wants a timeline for removing U.S. troops, and in May, voted
    against additional funding for the war.


    `We're far from cutting our troops short,' she told the 80-member
    audience. `There is enough money in the pipeline to last well through
    spring and possibly into next June.'


    Some, including three men who stood up and asked loudly, inquired
    about why she isn't pushing to impeach the president.


    `I'm not willing to bring everything to a halt,' Eshoo said. She
    experienced the process when President Bill Clinton was impeached in
    1998. `It tears the country apart.'


    Eshoo said she is unwilling to halt progress that Congress has made
    in the 30 weeks since Democrats came to majority power, because of
    their accomplishments.


    The congresswoman voiced pride that Congress raised the federal
    minimum wage for the first time in 10 years and made the largest
    investment in student aid since the G.I. bill passed during World War
    II.

    Congress cut interest rates on federal student loans in half to help
    students pay for college without facing daunting debts after they
    graduate, she noted.


    Eshoo is fighting an unwarranted surveillance program put forward by
    the administration.


    `Some people will give up their freedoms for security,' Eshoo said.
    `We don't need to. I can tell you, we don't need to. We cannot
    tolerate the warrantless surveillance of Americans.'


    Eshoo reported on the Blackwater contractor scandal in Iraq, saying
    that it would haunt the U.S. for a long time, but that Congress is
    taking the proper steps to find out the facts and make sure it
    doesn't happen again.


    As for Resolution 106, which labeled Armenian deaths during the time
    of the Ottoman Empire as `genocide,' Eshoo did not find the bill as
    menacing as the Turks have claimed.


    `I seriously doubt that the relationship (between the United States
    and Turkey) is seriously damaged because of something that happened
    100 years ago.'


    Congress also passed new lobbying and ethics guidelines, and Eshoo is
    pushing for the State Children's Health Insurance Program to cover
    another 5 million uninsured children, despite a presidential veto
    earlier this year.


    Eshoo voted for a new veteran's benefits bill, the largest so far,
    and pay-as-you-go rules that force Congress to identify funding
    sources for a bill before it can pass.


    The congresswoman voted for a hate crimes prevention bill and the
    Genetic Information Privacy Act, which will protect the results of
    tests from insurers who might use genetic predisposition against
    applicants when setting their rates.


    Eshoo, whose 14th District covers much of Silicon Valley and reaches
    into Scotts Valley, San Lorenzo Valley and Bonny Doon, said she was
    pleased to see a large crowd at the Oct. 13 town hall meeting.

    She visited the Scotts Valley City Hall to report on Congress'
    activities and answer questions.


    `It means a great deal to have constituents that come out and care,'
    she said with a smile.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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