Last Update:
Friday, 03 December, 2010 09:15

Nancy Pelosi (D, CA), Wicked Witch of the West
I'll get you my pretty and
your little dog too!
Nancy Pelosi
Pelosi open to second stimulus
By: Alex Isenstadt
March 10, 2009 12:23 PM EST
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday she is open to introducing a second
stimulus bill, but it's too early to determine the size of such a package and
the timing on another major economic measure.
“We have to keep the door open to see how it goes,” Pelosi told reporters
Tuesday following a House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee hearing on
the economy.
But Pelosi said she wanted to give the $787 billion stimulus package passed last
month time to work before she starts making promises on a second stimulus.
Pelosi also accused the Washington media and cable news establishment of taking
an overly critical approach toward the first stimulus — and expecting too much
too soon.
“We hope it will be sooner rather than later that [the stimulus] catches fire in
Washington, D.C. But we aren’t waiting,” she said.
“This is a fiscally sound package,” she said. “This is market-oriented.”
© 2009 Capitol News Company, LLC
Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and
expecting different results.
Albert Einstein
Judicial Watch Uncovers Documents Detailing Pelosi's
Repeated Requests for Military Travel
Contact Information:
Press Office 202-646-5172, ext 305
Washington, DC -- March 10, 2009
House Speaker Issued Unprecedented Demands for Military Aircraft and Wasted
Taxpayer Resources with Last Minute Cancellations
Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes
government corruption, announced today that it has obtained documents from the
Department of Defense (DOD) detailing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's multiple
requests for military air travel. The documents, obtained by Judicial Watch
through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), include internal DOD email
correspondence detailing attempts by DOD staff to accommodate Pelosi's numerous
requests for military escorts and military aircraft as well as the speaker's
last minute cancellations and changes. The following are a few highlights from
the documents, which are linked in full below:
In response to a series of requests for military aircraft, one Defense
Department official wrote, "Any chance of politely querying [Pelosi's team] if
they really intend to do all of these or are they just picking every
weekend?...[T]here's no need to block every weekend 'just in case'..." The email
also notes that Pelosi's office had, "a history of canceling many of their past
requests."
One DOD official complained about the "hidden costs" associated with the
speaker's last minute changes and cancellations. "We have...folks prepping the
jets and crews driving in (not a short drive for some), cooking meals and
preflighting the jets etc."
The documents include a discussion of House Ethics rules and Defense Department
policies as they apply to the speaker's requests for staff, spouses and extended
family to accompany her on military aircraft. In May 2008, for example, Pelosi
requested that her husband join her on a Congressional Delegation (CODEL) into
Iraq. The DOD explained to Pelosi that the agency has a written policy
prohibiting spouses from joining CODEL's into combat zones.
Documents obtained from the U.S. Army include correspondence from Speaker
Pelosi's office requesting an Army escort and three military planes to transport
Pelosi and other members of Congress to Cleveland, Ohio, for the funeral
services of the late Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones. Pelosi noted in her letter of
August 22, 2008, that such a request, labeled "Operation Tribute" was an
"exception to standard policy."
The documents also detail correspondence from intermediaries for Speaker Pelosi
issuing demands for certain aircraft and expressing outrage when requested
military planes were not available. "It is my understanding there are no G5s
available for the House during the Memorial Day recess. This is totally
unacceptable...The speaker will want to know where the planes are..." wrote Kay
King, Director of the House Office of Interparliamentary Affairs. In a separate
email, when told a certain type of aircraft would not be available, King writes,
"This is not good news, and we will have some very disappointed folks, as well
as a very upset [s]peaker."
During another email exchange DOD staff advised Kay King that one Pelosi
military aircraft request could not be met because of "crew rest requirements"
and offered to help secure commercial travel. Kay King responded: "We appreciate
the efforts to help the codel [sic] fly commercially but you know the problem
that creates with spouses. If we can find another way to assist with military
assets, we would like to do that."
Speaker Pelosi came under fire in 2007 for requesting a 42-seat Air Force
carrier to ferry the Speaker and her staff back and forth between San Francisco,
CA and Washington, DC. Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert was allowed access to
a 12-seat commuter jet for security reasons after the events of 9/11.
"Taken together, these documents show that Speaker Pelosi treats the Air Force
like her personal airline," said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. "Not only
does Speaker Pelosi issue unreasonable requests for military travel, but her
office seems unconcerned about wasting taxpayer money with last minute
cancellations and other demands."