Newspapers all across the country are ripping the 47
Senate Republicans who attempted to sabotage President Obama by writing
a letter to Iran. Here is a sampling of the criticism from no less than
22 newspaper editorial boards.
The Concord Monitor
in New Hampshire took Sen. Kelly Ayotte to task for signing the letter,
“Ayotte and the rest of the gang of 47 would like nothing more than for
the American people to view the letter as a necessary defense against
misguided negotiations and flawed policies, a comeuppance for an
arrogant commander in chief who flaunts his contempt for the
Constitution. They want you to know, America, that they wrote the letter
for you because Obama must be stopped. In reality, they are playing a
political game dangerously out of bounds.”
The editorial board of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette
wrote that the senators who signed the letter should be ashamed,
“America’s partners in the talks are among the world’s most important
nations — China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom. They
can only be appalled at seeing Secretary of State John Kerry and the
president, who are charged with making the nation’s foreign policy, hit
from behind by one house of the federal legislature. The senators who
signed the letter should be ashamed.”
The Sacramento Bee wrote
that Senate Republicans need a civics lesson, “It’s the Republican
senators who signed the letter – including Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell and potential presidential candidates Ted Cruz of Texas, Rand
Paul of Kentucky and Marco Rubio of Florida – who could use a remedial
civics class. The Constitution gives the president broad authority to
conduct foreign policy. The Senate’s “advise and consent” role covers
formal treaties. The potential deal on Iran’s nuclear weapons program is
not a treaty. It is a multinational agreement that involves Britain,
China, France, Germany and Russia, as well as the United States and
Iran.”
The Baltimore Sun
pulled no punches, “The poison pen note was a shocking example of just
how far President Barack Obama’s GOP critics in Congress are willing to
go in an effort to undercut his foreign policy goals…The GOP senators
might just as well have put up a big sign over their chamber warning the
mullahs in Tehran to prepare for war because that’s the practical
import of rejecting any possibility of a negotiated resolution of the
two countries’ differences. Republican lawmakers in effect have adopted
the hard-line agenda of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who
offered a similarly uncompromising view of Iranian intentions when he
addressed a joint meeting of Congress last week.”
The Boston Globe
accused Senate Republicans of winning sympathy for Iran, “WINNING
SYMPATHY for the renegade Islamic Republic of Iran is no easy trick. But
Republicans in the US Senate seem to be accomplishing it with their
breathtakingly reckless intrusion into international diplomacy….The
letter not only undercuts the president’s traditional authority to
oversee the shaping of foreign policy but badly undermines America’s
credibility in the international community.”
The Kansas City Star
wondered if it was the Iran letter, or the Republican senators who were
treacherous, “Given the Republicans’ pure hatred of Obama, it also
seemed extra personal, yet another politically motivated attempt to stop
him from doing anything that might be perceived as a victory for his
administration.”
The Salt Lake City Tribune
referred to Utah’s two Republican senators as foolish for joining the
campaign, “It will be up to history to judge whether the latest partisan
stunt joined by Utah Sens. Mike Lee and Orrin Hatch amounts to an act
of End Times warmongering or merely another bit of cringe-worthy
buffoonery on the global stage. Chances are that the foolish, dangerous
and arguably felonious attempt by the Obama Derangement Caucus of the
Senate will soon be forgotten. Unless, as President Obama himself
muttered the other day, the Senate Republicans make common cause with
the hard-liners in Iran to push the region, and the world, that much
closer to nuclear war.”
The quotes above from editorial boards around the
country are a small taste of the backlash that is growing against the
Senate Republicans. Anger is growing from coast to coast.
It is not an understatement to suggest that the
outrage over the Senate Republican letter is national. In this time of
great partisan divide, Republicans managed to unify the country with an
act that was as blatantly unpatriotic as it was blindingly stupid. The
tea partiers who turned the House of Representatives into a three ring
circus have invaded the Senate, and the letter to Iran is their most
high profile bit of handiwork.
Republicans
are desperately trying to convert Hillary Clinton’s emails into a 2016
campaign story, but the irony is that with their Iran letter, the Senate
GOP might have just handed Democrats a powerful issue that could put an
end to their fragile Senate majority.
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