All Episodes
Dec. 18, 2018 - Ron Paul Liberty Report
04:08
Weekly Update --- Why The Senate Vote to End Yemen War is So Important

It was great to see the Senate tell the President "no more" in Yemen. It was great to see the Senate tell the President "no more" in Yemen. It was great to see the Senate tell the President "no more" in Yemen.

|

Time Text
Senate Vote to End Yemen War 00:03:28
Hello everybody and thank you for tuning in to the weekly report, Why the Senate Vote to End Yemen War is So Important.
Last week something historic happened in the U.S. Senate.
For the first time in 45 years, a chamber of the U.S. Congress voted to pool U.S. forces from a military conflict under the 1973 War Powers Act.
While there is plenty to criticize in the War Powers Act, in this situation it was an important tool used by a broad Senate coalition to require President Trump to end U.S. participation in the Saudi war against Yemen.
And while the resolution was not perfect, there were huge loopholes.
It has finally drawn wider attention to the U.S. administration's dirty war in Yemen.
The four-year Saudi war on neighboring Yemen has left some 50,000 dead, including many women and children.
We've all seen the horrible photos of school buses blown up by the Saudis using U.S.-supplied bombs loaded into U.S.-supplied aircraft.
Millions more face starvation as the infrastructure is decimated and the ports have been blocked to keep out humanitarian aid.
Stopping U.S. participation in this brutal war is by itself a wise and correct move, even if it comes years too late.
The Senate vote is also about much more than just Yemen.
It's about the decades of presidential assaults on the Constitution in matters of war.
President Trump is only the latest to ignore Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, which grants war powers exclusively to Congress.
Yes, it was President Obama who initially dragged us into the U.S. illegally into the Yemen war.
But President Trump has only escalated it.
And to this point, Congress has been totally asleep.
Fortunately, that all changed last week with a Senate vote.
Unfortunately, members of the House will not be allowed to vote on their own version of the Senate resolution.
Republican leadership snuck language into a rule vote on the farm bill prohibiting any debate on the Yemen war for the rest of this congressional session.
As Representative Thomas Massey correctly pointed out, the move was both unconstitutional and illegal.
However, as is often the case in bipartisan Washington, there is plenty of blame to go around.
The Republicans were able to carry the vote on the rule and thus deny any debate on Yemen only because of a group of Democrats crossed over and voted with Republicans.
Democratic Whip Sterny Hoyer is being blamed for progressives for his apparent lack of interest in holding his party together.
Why would Democrats help a Republican president keep his war going?
Because, especially when you look at congressional leadership, both parties are pro-war and pro-executive branch overreach.
They prefer it to be their president who is doing the overreaching, but they understand that sooner or later they'll be back in charge.
Bipartisanship In Washington 00:00:37
As I have often said, there is too much bipartisanship in Washington, not too much partisanship.
Americans should be ashamed and outraged that their government is so beholding to a foreign power, in this case Saudi Arabia, that it would actively participate in a brutal war of aggression.
Participating in this war against one of the world's poorest countries is far from upholding American values.
We should applaud and support the coalition in the Senate that voted to end the war.
They should know how much we appreciate their efforts.
Export Selection