Friends,
Harris and Raskin voted against war and in favor of COVID-19 relief. Contact your member of the Maryland delegation who voted for war and not COVID-19 relief—Brown, Hoyer, Mfume, Sarbanes, Ruppersberger and Trone.
Kagiso, Max
Wednesday, December 09, 2020
Ilhan Omar Rips Congress for Approving $740.5 Billion Bill to 'Appease Defense Contractors' While Skimping on Covid Relief
"It is unconscionable to pass a Pentagon budget that
continues to fund unnecessary projects and endless wars during a time of
widespread suffering across our country."
Rep. Ilhan
Omar (D-Minn.) speaks during a press conference on July 7, 2020 in St. Paul,
Minnesota. (Photo: Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
After the
Democrat-controlled House on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved a
$740.5 billion budget for the Pentagon for fiscal year 2021, Rep. Ilhan Omar
slammed the warped priorities that have led lawmakers to pass with few
objections a "bill to appease defense [sic] contractors and special
interests" while skimping on badly needed coronavirus relief.
"It is
unconscionable to pass a Pentagon budget that continues to fund unnecessary
projects and endless wars during a time of widespread suffering across our
country," the Minnesota Democrat said in a statement.
"Thousands of Minnesotans are struggling to put food on the table and keep
a roof over their heads. We should be investing our resources here at home—not
increasing our already exorbitant Pentagon budget."
Omar was one
of just 37 House Democrats to oppose the annual National Defense Authorization
Act (NDAA), which passed by a vote of 335-78—a veto-proof majority. The
legislation is expected to easily clear the Senate despite President Donald
Trump's threats to veto the
measure over objections unrelated to the size of the proposed Pentagon budget.
See the full
roll call for the House vote here.
"This
bill further commits our service members to escalations abroad—including a
now-two-decade old unpopular war in Afghanistan," Omar said. "Every
dollar we spend on endless wars is another missed opportunity to invest in our
communities. Shamefully, this bill does nothing to stop arms sales to some of
the most corrupt and brutal regimes in the world, such as Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates."
Passage of
the sprawling defense [sic] bill came as congressional leaders and the White
House continued to negotiate the details of a coronavirus relief package that
progressive lawmakers have decried as
woefully inadequate to address the needs of countless sick,
hungry, and eviction-prone Americans.
A $908
billion bipartisan relief framework unveiled last week would not
provide direct stimulus payments to U.S. households, while an
$916 billion offer put forth by
the White House late Tuesday would not provide a weekly boost to unemployment
benefits. Both plans fall well short of the $3-4.5 trillion stimulus that experts say is
needed to relieve widespread suffering and prevent a prolonged
economic recession.
Rep. Mark
Pocan (D-Wis.) joined Omar in voting against the NDAA on Tuesday, declaring that
Congress "should be cutting down the Pentagon's budget—not increasing it...
again."
"Let's
put the priorities of the American people above the profits of defense [sic]
contractors," Pocan added.
Pocan over
the summer led an effort with Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) to cut the bloated
Pentagon budget by 10% and invest the savings in housing, healthcare, and
education. As Common Dreams reported at
the time, the amendment ultimately failed thanks to opposition from 139 House
Democrats and 185 Republicans. A similar amendment led by Sen. Bernie Sanders
(I-Vt.) was voted down in
the Senate.
Earlier this
month, Sarah Lazare of In These Times contrasted the
ongoing "stalemate over coronavirus relief with bipartisan support
for the U.S. war machine," which reliably receives an injection of
hundreds of billions of dollars in funding each year with little opposition.
"We
should not allow bipartisan agreement on military spending to simply
fade into the background, as an unremarkable and immutable fact of U.S. politics,"
wrote Lazare. "That we can find the money for war but not for coronavirus
relief exposes the moral rot at the center of U.S. politics, a rot that
must be dug out and expunged if we are to get through this crisis."
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Donations can be sent
to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206,
Baltimore, MD 21212. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at]
comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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