>From the cnn.com site I got the transcript of what Daschle said on the
Senate floor.  As everyone knows, I am a Democrat.  I am a peace
activist.  I am no fan of G W Bush.  And I have seen all kinds of
political trash from the LBJ days on.  But I am absolutely outraged by
what Bush and the the Republicans are doing with September 11th and
Iraq.  Even more disgusting is that Bush's out of line comments came in
response to the issue of his wanting to eliminate collective bargaining
and civil service from the employees of the proposed Homeland Security
cabinet department.  We are "not interested in the security of the
American people" because we support collective bargaining?  Because we
support civil service?  There is no way to spin this one.  When Bush's
political advisor speaks of marketing the war against Iraq as a "new
product" then there is a shocking lack of morality in the White House.
There could be 1,000 adults crawling on the knees in the White House and
it would not be anywhere near as immoral as marketing war as a product.
There is no decency left - if there ever was.

Vince





DASCHLE: Mr. President, I wanted to take a few minutes of leader time
this morning, before we get into the debate on the amendment offered by
the senator from Texas, to talk about a concern that I have wanted to
avoid talking about for weeks.

I am very saddened by the fact that we have debated homeland security
now for three weeks. I have noted on several occasions that there is no
reason, on a bipartisan basis, this body cannot work together to
overcome our differences and to pass a meaningful and substantive bill
dealing with homeland security.

Some have suggested that the delay has been politically motivated, and I
have said: I am not willing to believe that. In fact, yesterday I said:
We intend to give the president the benefit of the doubt.

Over the course of the last several weeks, as we have debated national
security, the issue of war in Iraq has become more and more prominent.

And again, as I go back to my experience in 1991 and 1992, during a
similar period -- the fall and winter prior to and after an election --
I expressed the concern that our politics in this climate could easily
create a politicized environment and, in so doing, diminish, minimize,
degrade the debate on an issue as grave as war.

No one here needs to be reminded of the consequences of war. No one here
should have to be admonished about politicizing the debate about war.
But, Mr. President, increasingly, over the course of the last several
weeks, reports have surfaced which have led me to believe that indeed
there are those who would politicize this war.

I was given a report about a recommendation made by Matthew Dowd, the
pollster for the White House and the Republican National Committee. He
told a victory dinner not long ago -- I quote -- "The No. 1 driver for
our base motivationally is this war."

Dowd said war could be beneficial to the GOP in the 2002 elections. And
then I quote: "When an issue dominates the landscape like this one will
dominate the landscape, I think through this election and probably for a
long time to come, it puts Republicans on a very good footing."

I thought: Well, perhaps that is a pollster. Perhaps pollsters are paid
to say what is best regardless of what other considerations ought to be
made. Pollsters are paid to tell you about the politics of issues. And
were it left with pollsters, perhaps I would not be as concerned.

But then I read that Andy Card was asked: Well, why did this issue come
before Washington and the country now? Why are we debating it in
September?

Where were we last year? Where were we last spring? And Mr. Card's
answer was: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new
products in August."

New products? War?

And then I listen to reports of the vice president. The vice president
comes to fund-raisers, as he did just recently in Kansas. The headline
written in the paper the next day about the speech he gave to that
fund-raiser was: Cheney talks about war: electing Taff would aid war
effort.

And then we find a diskette discovered in Lafayette Park, a computer
diskette that was lost somewhere between a Republican strategy meeting
in the White House and the White House. Advice was given by Karl Rove,
and the quote on the disk was: "Focus on war."

I guess, right from the beginning, I thought: Well, first it was
pollsters, and then it was White House staff, and then it was the vice
president.

And all along I was asked: Are you concerned about whether or not this
war is politicized? And my answer, on every occasion, was: Yes.

And then the followup question is: Is the White House politicizing the
war? And I said: Without question, I can't bring myself to believe that
it is. I can't believe any president or any administration would
politicize the war.

But then I read in the paper this morning, now even the president -- the
president is quoted in The Washington Post this morning as saying that
the Democratic-controlled Senate is "not interested in the security of
the American people."

Not interested in the security of the American people? You tell Sen.
Inouye he is not interested in the security of the American people. You
tell those who fought in Vietnam and in World War II they are not
interested in the security of the American people.

That is outrageous, outrageous. The president ought to apologize to Sen.
Inouye and every veteran who has fought in every war who is a Democrat
in the Senate. He ought to apologize to the American people. That is
wrong. We ought not politicize this war. We ought not politicize the
rhetoric about war and life and death.

I was in Normandy just last year. I have been in national cemeteries all
over this country. And I have never seen anything but stars -- the Star
of David and crosses on those markers. I have never seen "Republican"
and "Democrat."

This has to end, Mr. President. We have to get on with the business of
our country. We have to rise to a higher level. Our Founding Fathers
would be embarrassed by what they are seeing going on right now. We have
to do better than this. Our standard of deportment ought to be better.
Those who died gave their lives for better than what we are giving now.

So, Mr. President, it is not too late to end this politicization. It is
not too late to forget the pollsters, forget the campaign fund-raisers,
forget making accusations about how interested in national security
Democrats are; and let's get this job done right.

Let's rise to the occasion. That is what the American people are
expecting.

And we ought to give them no less. I yield the floor

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