Well, if I had to take a more extremist view than I already do, I'd agree with the sentiment that all those who voted for the war should be out on their asses.
However, I don't think it's as simple as that.
Not that I want to be in a position to defend them, but the fact remains that members of Congress
DID NOT see the same intelligence as the Bush admin, and in fact, dissenting intel was actually KEPT from them.
So as much as I want a shiny, happy, idealistic Congress - the argument as it's being hashed out really amounts to, "F*ck the Dems, they trusted the President!"...and unfortunately, I don't see how our Democracy would function if that trust wasn't implicit in the decision making process. It's unfortunate that the Bush admin violated that trust, since, in the future, a president may honestly be making the case for war (a necessary war) and we'll find a Congress unwilling to act due to "Boy who cried Wolf" syndrome.
Let me be clear: I've never supported the war in Iraq and knew it to be a sham since the first murmurs (days after 9/11) that Muhammad Atta met an Iraqi official in Prague. It stunk, and it was obvious.
Ultimately, when I have a choice at the ballot box between someone who openly supported the war and someone who openly objected to it, it would certainly weigh on my vote (there'd be other considerations, I'm not a single-issue voter)...however, to simply call for the removal of everyone who voted for the "authorization to use force in diplomatic efforts fail" (NOT a vote for War, mind you)...is impractical and inoperative. It just won't happen.
This issue is one of the few things I try to be pragmatic about. Otherwise, I'd go insane and snipe people from the tops of buildings and we don't want that.
(ed: Dear Secret Service - that is a joke!)Lastly, you state members of Congress "never were misled; their constituents were." Well, they are elected by those constituents in order to represent those constituents. Howard Dean found it easier to dissent on the war because his constituents, by-and-large, objected to it. How would our system function if Congresspeople simply voted their conscience, time and again...without consulting the people who hired them? Maybe this isn't the best argument, when War in the issue, but I think it'd be interesting to look how that factored in.
Saving one's ass, often amounts to serving the will of the people.
mrC