Cowardly New Hampshire politicians refuse to vote on impeachment bill!
CONCORD, New Hampshire - April 16, 2008 - The House debated, then declined to take a final vote today on a resolution that called for impeachment of President George Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.
After 45 minutes of debate, the House tabled the resolution on a vote of 227-95.
The resolution’s author, Rep. Betty
Hall, D-Brookline, said impeachment would uncover the facts behind secrets the
Bush regime has fought to protect. She said impeachment would bring out the
truth about the decisions to wage the war in Iraq, use of the Justice
Department for political purposes, details of domestic surveillance and the
torture of prisoners.
Hall, 87, drew support from both
political parties during public hearings on the bill, but it emerged from a
House committee with a 10-5 vote recommending it be killed.
Rep. Kris Roberts, D-Keene, chair
of the House State Federal Relations and Veterans Affairs Committee, said the
resolution expects too much from a Congress that has little time to handle
other affairs including the run-up to November elections.
He said part of the blame for the events
stemming from Iraq should be laid with Congress. “If Congress had done its job,
the President would have had to ask for a declaration of war,” he said. After the
first Iraq war in 1991, Americans believed victory would be quick and easy, “so
members of Congress abrogated their responsibility,” Roberts said.
Deputy Minority Leader David Hess,
R-Hooksett, argued that the petition was too general, and needed to be as
specific as a criminal indictment.
He said an impeachment proceeding
is for criminal conduct, “not behavior that pushes to the edge some of our
laws, but for high crimes and misdemeanors … We have to deal with facts.”
A rally for the resolution this
week included speakers Daniel Ellsberg, Vietnam War critic who leaked the
Pentagon Papers, and former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark.
Had the resolution passed, it would not have had any
binding authority on Congress.