Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Nancy Pelo-cchio Gets A Houston Welcome - Updated

Howdy, San Fran Nan. Houston Tea Party activists roll out the welcome mat for the dissembling House Speaker.

There should be an event like this wherever she lands her taxpayer-subsidized jet:

Houston Tea Party Society Protest

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Signs of the times:

By Michelle Malkin – MichlleMalkin.com

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FOX Nation Victory! Congress Retreats on 'Plane-Gate'

FOX Nation Victory! Congress Retreats on 'Plane-Gate'

WASHINGTON -- House leaders late Monday dropped plans to spend $550 million on Air Force passenger planes for use by senior government officials, a sum that more than doubled the Pentagon's official request and had drawn strong public criticism.

"If the Department of Defense does not want these aircraft, they will be eliminated from the bill," said Rep. John Murtha (D., Pa.), the chairman of the House panel that sought the aircraft order.

The House will seek only $220 million to purchase one Gulfstream plane and three Boeing Co. aircraft, which was the original request by Department of Defense officials.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California supported Mr. Murtha's decision to retreat from the larger order, her spokesman said.

The reversal by House leaders came after several days of mounting opposition from the Pentagon, U.S. senators and other House lawmakers.

Before departing for its August recess, the House approved funds to buy a total of eight planes: three Gulfstream jets and five military versions of a Boeing 737 for a total cost of $550 million. Lawmakers said the additional executive jets were needed to replace an aging fleet of planes that were more expensive to operate and maintain.

The Department of Defense had asked Congress for money to purchase four planes: One Gulfstream V and one new business-class equivalent of a Boeing 737. It also sought the authority to purchase two 737s that were already being leased by government officials.

The Air Force version of the Gulfstream V each costs $66 million, according to the Department of Defense, and the 737s cost about $70 million.

The House plan to buy eight planes was tucked into a $636 billion bill to fund the Defense Department for the next fiscal year. That measure passed 400 to 30.

After the $550 million plane deal became public, the Pentagon said it did not request and did not want that many planes.

Geoff Morrell, a spokesman for Defense Secretary Robert Gates, said Friday that spending on the extra planes would force the military "to take money from things we do need to fund and redirect it for things we don't need. And in a time of war we just can't afford that."

On Sunday, at least a half-dozen senators said they were opposed to the additional funds.

Write to Brody Mullins at brody.mullins@wsj.com and T.W. Farnam at timothy.farnam@wsj.com

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