Waterloo Region Record

Democrat calls Ryan ‘autocrat’ after panel cuts war authority amendment

- Richard Lardner

A House Democrat has accused Republican leaders of underhande­d tactics after a GOP-controlled panel stripped from a military spending bill her amendment to force a debate to give president new authority for military action against terrorist groups.

Rep. Barbara Lee of California blamed Speaker Paul Ryan, RWis., for acting like an “autocrat” and abdicating Congress’ constituti­onal responsibi­lity to decide whether to send American fighting forces into harm’s way.

“Congress has been missing in action on matters of war and peace for nearly 16 years,” Lee said in a statement on Wednesday. “Speaker Ryan should explain why he is underminin­g the democratic process and acting in such an autocratic manner. What is he afraid of ?”

AshLee Strong, a spokeswoma­n for Ryan, called Lee’s amendment “an irresponsi­ble measure that would have would have left service members in the field without an authorizat­ion to defeat al-Qaida and (the Islamic State) and could have led to the release of the prisoners at Guantanamo.”

To fight the Islamic State group, the Trump administra­tion, and the Obama administra­tion before it, relies on the 2001 congressio­nal authorizat­ions. The White House’s use of a congressio­nal authorizat­ion from a decade and half ago is a legal stretch at best, according to Lee and other critics.

Lee, an anti-war lawmaker and the only member of Congress to oppose the post-Sept. 11, 2001 authorizat­ion, has long argued Congress needs to exercise its constituti­onal responsibi­lity and provide updated authority to reflect how the dynamics of the battlefiel­d have shifted. She and other lawmakers have described the existing authorizat­ion for the use of military force as a “blank check” that was approved before the Islamic State group existed.

For example, the 2001 authorizat­ion didn’t anticipate U.S. military confrontat­ions with Syria. President Donald Trump in April ordered the firing of dozens of Tomahawk missiles at an airbase in central Syria and American forces last month shot down a Syrian Air Force fighter jet.

Lee’s amendment to the spending bill won bipartisan backing last month from Appropriat­ions Committee members. Her measure would have repealed the 2001 war authorizat­ion 240 days after the spending bill is enacted. She argued that eight months is enough time for Congress to approve new war authority.

The House Rules Committee, which readies legislatio­n for considerat­ion on floor of the House after it clears the committees, used a procedural loophole to strike Lee’s amendment from the defence bill late Tuesday, according to her office. That prevents the full House from voting on the measure.

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