Invitation
to Netanyahu to address U.S. Congress: When bipartisan means partisan
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[January 24, 2015]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, jolted Washington
this week by inviting Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
address Congress, his office said it had been done "on behalf of the
bipartisan leadership."
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In reality, it was among the most partisan moves so far by
America's newly Republican-controlled Congress. Fuming Democratic
leaders in Congress have said they were not consulted, raising
questions over whether Boehner had accurately characterized the
nature of his invitation.
The invitation was worded that way, a Boehner spokesman said on
Friday, because "Boehner is the Speaker of the whole House, elected
by the whole House." Boehner was re-elected as the chamber's leader
on Jan. 6 with 216 votes, all from Republicans, out of the 435
voting members of the House of Representatives.
Harry Reid, the Democratic leader in the Senate, and Nancy Pelosi,
his counterpart in the House, said they had not been told in advance
of Boehner's plan to invite Netanyahu. The White House also said
that President Barack Obama, a Democrat, had not been told ahead of
time.
"The Speaker of the House has awesome power. I know that. I've been
there," Pelosi told her weekly news conference on Thursday. "The
fact, though, is that power is not to be squandered."
In announcing the invitation on Wednesday, Boehner called Netanyahu
"a great friend of our country."
“In this time of challenge, I am asking the Prime Minister to
address Congress on the grave threats radical Islam and Iran pose to
our security and way of life," he said.
Democratic congressional staffers called Boehner's action a blatant
political ploy.
Netanyahu is expected to back Republican moves to pressure Obama to
take a tougher line in talks on a nuclear deal with Iran.
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The prime minister is due to address Congress two weeks before
Israel's general election on March 17 in which he is vying for a
fourth term.
The flap added to a growing perception that Netanyahu's government
has become a partisan Republican player in U.S. politics, despite
historically close ties to lawmakers in both parties.
Republicans were unapologetic.
Arizona Republican John McCain said the party was giving Obama a
taste of his own medicine. In a hallway interview at the Capitol, he
termed the invitation "a great idea" after Obama's announcement that
he would push ahead on policy without waiting to compromise with
Congress.
"He basically said, 'I'm going to do my thing, you do your thing.'
We got it, we got the message," McCain said.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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