From Yahoo News
By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Senate, responding to voter frustration with corruption and special interest influence in Washington, on Thursday overwhelmingly approved far-reaching ethics and lobbying reform legislation. Under the bill, passed 96-2, senators will give up gifts and free travel from lobbyists, pay more for travel on corporate jets and make themselves more accountable for the pet projects they insert into bills. Entire Article
The oversight committee part of the bill did not make it through this time. The committee would have been an independent group to investigate the breaches of ethics from members.
From Yahoo News
Thu Jan 18,2007
LONDON - An Iranian offer to help the United States stabilize
Iraq and end its military support for Hezbollah and Hamas was rejected by Vice President
Dick Cheney in 2003, a former top State Department official told the British Broadcasting Corp. ADVERTISEMENT
The U.S. State Department was open to the offer, which came in an unsigned letter sent shortly after the American invasion of Iraq, Lawrence Wilkerson, former Secretary of State
Colin Powell's chief of staff, told BBC's Newsnight in a program broadcast Wednesday night. But, Wilkerson said, Cheney vetoed the deal.
"We thought it was a very propitious moment" to strike a deal, Wilkerson said. "But as soon as it got to the White House, and as soon as it got to the vice president's office, the old mantra of 'We don't talk to evil' ... reasserted itself."
* * * *
Of course this was rejected by Cheney, Bush and the rest of the Crime Family! The group would have lost to much money and I'd bet that Cheney's old company had already paid him to much for all of those no-bid contracts that they received from this administration.
Someone from the State Department has denied that the department ever got the letter from Iran. It probably went into the paper shredder that was parked in front of Cheney's house!
Meanwhile, some retired generals told a U.S. Senate committee on Thursday that sending the additional 21,500 troops to Iraq will not help.
"Too little and too late," is the way Gen. Joseph P. Hoar, a former chief of the Central Command, described the effort to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.... "The solution is political, not military," he said.
"A fool’s errand," was the judgment of Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, who commanded troops in the first Gulf War. He said other countries had concluded that the effort in Iraq was not succeeding, noting that "our allies are leaving us and will be gone by summer."
TPMCafe has a list of bills that are up for proposal in Congress that have to do with the Bush 'escalation'. Check it out when you have the time.
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