President George W. Bush makes remarks on Tuesday's election results during a nationally televised news conference Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2006, from the East Room of the White House. |
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Washington -- Acknowledging Republican
Party losses in U.S. midterm elections, President Bush expressed
confidence that he will be able to find “common ground”
with the confirmed Democratic majority in the U.S. House of
Representatives and the potential Democratic majority in the
Senate on issues such as Iraq, immigration, education and
the economy.
Speaking at the White House November 8,
Bush also announced that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
is resigning and will be replaced by former CIA Director
Robert Gates.
A total of 227 Democratic candidates from
across the United States won their elections to the 435-member
House of Representatives, in which Republicans have held
a majority since 1994. The party also made significant gains
in the Senate, although outright majority status in the
chamber has yet to be decided, pending the outcome of the
Virginia Senate race.
The new 110th Congress will be sworn into
office in January 2007. The 109th Congress, including many
members defeated in the midterm elections, will reconvene
on November 13 to complete business left unfinished when
members recessed for the elections.
The president said he was disappointed at
the outcome of the elections – an outcome he said
was due partly to concerns over congressional ethics. He
also acknowledged that there was “no question”
that concern among Americans over the U.S. military intervention
in Iraq “had something to do with it” as well.
However, Bush warned those who consider
themselves enemies of the United States not to “be
joyful” because of the election results, because both
Democrats and Republicans “understand we cannot accept
defeat” in Iraq.
The president said terrorists should “not
confuse the workings of our democracies with a lack of will.
Our nation is committed to bringing you to justice. Liberty
and democracy are the source of America's strength, and
liberty and democracy will lift up the hopes and desires
of those you're trying to destroy,” he said.
Bush also pledged that the United States
would continue to stand with the Iraqi people. “We
know you want a better way of life, and now is the time
to seize it,” he said.
“FRESH PERSPECTIVE” SOUGHT AT
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT
Flanked by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, left, and Dr. Robert Gates, President George W. Bush announces the resignation of Secretary Rumsfeld Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2006, and the intention to nominate Dr. Gates as his successor. |
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In announcing Rumsfeld’s resignation,
the president said “sometimes it's necessary to have
a fresh perspective,” adding “Bob Gates will bring
a fresh perspective.”
“Now, after a series of thoughtful
conversations, Secretary Rumsfeld and I agreed that the
timing is right for new leadership at the Pentagon,"
he said.
Bush said he will listen to the views of
Democratic leaders on Iraq and looks forward to the publication
of a report by the Iraq Study Group led by former Secretary
of State James Baker and former U.S. Representative Lee
Hamilton. The report is scheduled to be released before
the end of 2006.
Bush telephoned Democratic House and Senate
leaders following the election and said he intends to work
with the new Congress “in a bipartisan way”
to address issues confronting this country,” such
as minimum wage, entitlements, education, and immigration
reform. He also invited them to come to the White House
to discuss pending legislation for 2006, as well as to begin
discussing the legislative agenda for 2007.
“By putting this election and partisanship
behind us, we can launch a new era of cooperation and make
these next two years productive ones for the American people,”
he said.
DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL LEADER PLEDGES
PARTNERSHIP
Representative Nancy Pelosi, a California
Democrat who is expected to become the new leader of the
House in the wake of her party’s electoral victory,
told reporters November 8 that the Democrats were committed
to working with the White House toward “a new direction
in Iraq” and enacting a host of domestic reforms.
New leadership positions will be formally
filled at the beginning of the 110th Congress.
“Yesterday, the beauty and the genius
of our democracy, the American people spoke with their votes,
and they spoke for change and they spoke in support of a
new direction for all Americans,” Pelosi said, and
she pledged “civility and bipartisanship” on
behalf of her party, as well as “partnership …
and not partisanship” with President Bush and the
Republicans in Congress.
Pelosi has served in the House of Representatives
since 1987 and as the leader of House Democrats since 2002.
She is the first woman in U.S. history to lead a major party
in Congress and if selected, will be the first female speaker
of the House, a powerful congressional position that controls
the law-making body’s legislative agenda and is behind
only the vice president in the line of succession to the
presidency.
On Iraq, Pelosi said that American voters
sent a clear message to Washington that they want Democrats
and Republicans to “work together in a bipartisan
way to send a clear message to the Iraqi government and
people” to disarm the militias, continue with their
constitutional reforms and step up engagement with their
neighbors to promote stability and reconstruction.
She added that Democrats also would support
“responsible redeployments outside of Iraq”
of U.S. forces in the name of helping the Iraqi people strengthen
its new, independent democracy.
“The American people, with their votes
yesterday, placed their trust in the Democrats, Pelosi added,
“We will honor that trust. We will not disappoint.”
A transcript
of the Bush press conference is available on the White
House Web site.
Stephen Kaufman and David McKeeby
Washington File Staff Writers
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