The House of Representatives has rejected President Obama’s plans for Libya yet again. The House is planning on taking new measures to completely cut off funding for the U.S. operations in Libya. Both Democrats and Republicans seem to share the opinions of Libya and U.S. involvement in the country. Read more details after the jump.

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The House is poised to deliver its strongest rebuke yet to President Obama over his handling of the U.S. military intervention in Libya, as the White House pleads for patience in the mission to contain Muammar al-Qaddafi.

The House plans to take up two Libya-related measures Friday afternoon. One, a bill carrying the force of law, calls for cutting off funding for U.S. operations in Libya. The other, a non-binding resolution, would ask the House to “authorize” the mission.

Ahead of the votes, lawmakers delivered impassioned arguments on the House floor, with Democrats and Republicans joining together on both sides of the debate.

“We have no business in Libya,” declared Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, reprising an anti-war argument heard often during the height of the Iraq war. “We’re there because we don’t like Muammar Qaddafi. Well, there are a lot of bad guys in the world, and if we start picking them off one at a time, we will be at war with most of the world.”

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., urged his colleagues not to “pull the rug” out from under NATO over a dispute between branches in Washington.

“A slaughter almost occurred and we were able to stop it by our presence there,” he said.

The latter resolution, however, is not expected to pass. A down vote on authorization would send a clear message to the president that the House disapproves of his handling of the operation. It would follow another vote in the House earlier this month chiding the president for failing to provide a “compelling rationale” in Libya.

The fate of the funding bill is unclear. Offered by Rep. Tom Rooney, R-Fla., it would restrict funds for Libya save for search and rescue, intelligence, surveillance and a few other contingencies.

“The president has ignored the Constitution and the War Powers Resolution, but he cannot ignore a lack of funding,” Rooney said in a statement.

Taken together with proposals in the Senate, the House measures represent an accelerating move in Congress toward formally weighing in on Libya after more than three months on the relative sidelines.

Under the 1973 War Powers Resolution, the president was seemingly required to seek congressional authorization within two months or withdraw troops within three months. That deadline passed, but the Obama administration argued that it never needed authorization because the NATO-led mission in Libya did not constitute hostilities.

That argument angered many lawmakers. A New York Times report that said Obama overruled some of his legal advisers further incensed members of Congress.

“The war in Libya is illegal, unconstitutional and unwarranted. It must end,” Ohio Democrat Rep. Dennis Kucinich, said.

In a last-ditch effort Thursday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with rank-and-file Democrats to explain the mission and discuss the implications if the House votes to cut off funds.

The administration requested the closed-door meeting.

Minnesota Democrat Rep. Tim Walz said Clinton apologized for not coming to Congress earlier. But he said she warned about the implications of a House vote to cut off money.

“The secretary expressed her deep concern that you’re probably not on the right track when Qaddafi supports your efforts,” Walz said.

Rep. Howard Berman of California, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said such a vote “ensures the failure of the whole mission.”

Earlier this week Clinton said lawmakers were free to raise questions, but she asked, “Are you on Qaddafi’s side, or are you on the side on the aspirations of the Libyan people and the international coalition that has been bringing them support?”

In the Senate, backers of a resolution to authorize the operation wondered whether the administration had waited too long to address the concerns of House members.

“It’s way late,” said Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the top Republican on the Armed Services Committee. “This is one of the reasons why they’re having this veritable uprising in the House, because of a lack of communication. And then the icing on the cake was probably for them when he (Obama) said that we’re not engaged in hostilities. That obviously is foolishness.”

He added, however, “That is not a reason to pass a resolution that would encourage Muammar al-Qaddafi to stay in power.”

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