According to the Sacramento
Bee Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata announced today that he is introducing legislation to place
a measure on next year's presidential primary ballot calling for an immediate
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. Perata is unveiling the measure at
a 10 a.m. news conference in Berkeley - a place he calls the "birthplace
of the peace movement." Calling it the "vote us out of Iraq"
measure, Perata's office says the measure is the first of its kind in the
country. "We moved up
California's Presidential Primary to make our vote matter. Let's take that same
opportunity to tell the President where California stands on Iraq - and ask
every presidential candidate to stand with us," Perata said in a
statement. "If we convince other states to join us, we can make February
5th a national referendum to end this war."
The bill is a majority vote
measure and would require the governor's signature. Specifically, the measure
would ask voters to approve the following statement: The people of California,
in support of the men and women serving in the Armed Forces of the United
States, urge President Bush to end the U.S. occupation of Iraq and immediately
begin the safe and orderly withdrawal of all United States forces; and further
urge President Bush and the United States Congress to provide the necessary
diplomatic and non-military assistance to promote peace and stability in Iraq
and the Middle East.
The measure is not the first regarding Iraq to come before
the Legislature, though going to the voters is new. Perata has also launched a
Web page, voteusout.org, for the would-be initiative. Earlier this year, a resolution, authored by Sen.
Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, passed out of the state Senate urging Congress
and President Bush not to send more troops to Iraq. The bill passed on a
party-line vote, with one Democrat, Sen. Lou Correa, D-Santa Ana, opposed. "George
Bush hasn't learned from history - we've got the failed policy to prove
it," Perata said in the statement. "If the biggest state in the
nation says `end the war now,' maybe it will start to sink in." The proposed
nonbinding, advisory measure -- similar to a number of anti-war resolutions
passed by local governments -- will be formally introduced in the
Democratic-controlled Legislature on Monday. Perata acknowledged that the measure's presence on the
ballot could increase Democratic voter turnout, but he denied that it was
intended to boost fortunes of another possible measure on the Feb. 5 ballot
that would change term limits for state lawmakers and allow him, among other
incumbents, to serve longer.Aaron McLear, Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's press secretary, said the governor had not yet taken a
position on the bill.
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