A dramatic political development in the House.
UPDATE: His most peppery comments are aimed at Vice President Dick Cheney and you can already hear the Discrediting Machine revving up when you read this New York Times piece:
Mr. Murtha, a 73-year-old Marine Corps veteran of Vietnam combat, lashed back at Vice President Dick Cheney, who in a speech to a conservative group on Wednesday night condemned critics of the Iraq war. “The president and I cannot prevent certain politicians from losing their memory, or their backbone, but we’re not going to sit by and let them rewrite history,” Mr. Cheney said in an address to the group, Frontiers of Freedom, in Washington.
Mr. Murtha was disdainful of the vice president’s remarks, saying that “people with five deferments” had no right to make such remarks. Mr. Cheney, like millions of other young men of the era, avoided military service during the Vietnam war.Mr. Murtha’s remarks were termed “reprehensible and irresponsible” by a Republican member of the Appropriation’s defense subcommittee, Representative Kay Granger of Texas.
“It shows the Democratic Party has chosen a policy of retreat and defeatism which will only encourage the terrorists and threaten the stability of Iraq,” she said, according to The Associated Press.
House Republicans were expected to issue a general denunciation of Mr. Murtha this afternoon.
Mr. Murtha’s demeanor and personal history as well as his status on the Appropriations Committee may lend extra weight to his words. He generally shuns publicity and does not often speak on the House floor.
UPDATE II: National Review’s Rod Dreher:
…I could feel the ground shift. Murtha, as you know, is not a Pelosi-style Chardonnay Democrat; he’s a crusty retired career Marine who reminds me of the kinds of beer-slugging Democrats we used to have before the cultural left took over the party. Murtha, a conservative Dem who voted for the war, talked in detail about the sacrifices being borne by our soldiers and their families, and about his visits out to Walter Reed to look after the maimed, and how we’ve had enough, it’s time to come home. He was hell on the president too.
If tough, non-effete guys like Murtha are willing to go this far, and can make the case in ways that Red America can relate to — and listening to him talk was like listening to my dad, who’s about the same age, and his hunting buddies — then the president is in big trouble. I’m sure there’s going to be an anti-Murtha pile-on in the conservative blogosphere, but from where I sit, conservatives would be fools not to take this man seriously.
Joe Gandelman is a former fulltime journalist who freelanced in India, Spain, Bangladesh and Cypress writing for publications such as the Christian Science Monitor and Newsweek. He also did radio reports from Madrid for NPR’s All Things Considered. He has worked on two U.S. newspapers and quit the news biz in 1990 to go into entertainment. He also has written for The Week and several online publications, did a column for Cagle Cartoons Syndicate and has appeared on CNN.