Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

7-term senator to skip Netanyahu talk

- DONNA CASSATA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Alan Fram and Matthew Daly of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — The Senate’s most senior lawmaker said Tuesday he will skip the Israeli prime minister’s speech to Congress next month on Iran, calling the invitation by Republican­s without White House consultati­on a “tawdry and high-handed stunt.”

Seven-term Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont joined a half a dozen Democrats who have decided to boycott Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech, which comes in the middle of negotiatio­ns involving the U.S., other Western powers and Iran over its nuclear program. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, invited Netanyahu to address a joint meeting of Congress on March 3.

“The unfortunat­e way that House leaders have unilateral­ly arranged this, and then heavily politicize­d it, has demolished the potential constructi­ve value of this joint meeting,” Leahy said in a statement. “They have orchestrat­ed a tawdry and high-handed stunt that has embarrasse­d not only Israel but the Congress itself.”

Democrats have complained that the speech is an affront to President Barack Obama, who has said he will not meet with Netanyahu when he visits the U.S. Obama said Monday that he has “very real difference­s” with the Israeli leader over Iran and sanctions.

Vice President Joe Biden also will miss the speech because of unspecifie­d travel plans.

Boehner has defended the invitation.

One of the newest members of the Senate, Democrat Brian Schatz of Hawaii, said Tuesday that he would not attend the speech, criticizin­g an invitation “with the apparent purpose of underminin­g President Obama’s foreign policy prerogativ­es” and arguing that it does “more harm than good” to the bipartisan U.S.-Israeli alliance.

Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 House Demo- cratic leader, said he would attend Netanyahu’s speech, even though he said Boehner should have consulted with the White House and Democrats before inviting the Israeli prime minister to address lawmakers.

“It seems unseemly to have created this political issue,” Hoyer said.

Hoyer said he spoke to Netanyahu two weeks ago after he was invited to speak.

“I told him of the political consternat­ion that this had caused within our caucus and that it was unfortunat­e,” he said.

Netanyahu is a sharp critic of administra­tion negotiatio­ns with Iran over its nuclear program, and Democrats fear he’ll use the opportunit­y to embarrass Obama and further his own re-election prospects. The speech comes two weeks before elections in Israel.

In Israel, Netanyahu has insisted he will address Congress despite calls in the U.S. and in Israel for him to cancel the speech.

“I am going to the United States not because I seek a confrontat­ion with the president but because I must fulfill my obligation to speak up on a matter that affects the very survival of my country,” the prime minister said Tuesday, adding that he wants to speak in Congress because of its “important role” in a nuclear deal with Iran.

A half a dozen Jewish House Democrats, angered by the developmen­ts, met privately last week with Israeli Ambassador Ron Dermer and pressed for Netanyahu to find an alternativ­e format for speaking to lawmakers other than a speech to a joint meeting in the House chamber.

Leahy joins Vermont’s other senator, Independen­t Bernie Sanders, who said Monday that he would skip the speech.

The Senate has postponed a vote on a new round of sanctions against Iran ahead of the March 24 deadline for the U.S. and its internatio­nal partners to reach a framework agreement with Iran that could provide an outline for a more comprehens­ive deal to be finalized by late June.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said he was willing to delay a vote until late March “if that’s what it takes to get the votes” although he was ready to act now.

“I think the outcome of the negotiatio­ns is clear to anyone who has watched the way Iran has used negotiatio­ns in the past. They’ve used it the way the North Korea has used it, to buy time and space,” Rubio said after a classified briefing on Iran for members of the Senate.

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