It’s the usual suspects, the far-left quartet of David Price, G.K. Butterfield, Mel Watt and Brad Miller.

Here’s the whole roll call list. The final vote was 242-172, with only one Republican voting no. That was U.S. Rep. John J. Duncan Jr., a longtime foe of the Iraq war from Tennessee’s 2nd District. On the flip side, 78 Democrats voted with the other Republicans to pass the bill.

It makes you wonder about all the polls that purport to show Americans are turning against the war. Congressmen react to realities on the ground. That even goes for North Carolina’s aforementioned left-wing quartet, whose bases are made up of Bush-hating, far-left Democrat nutroots.

This is yet another defeat for the Democratically controlled Congress. Here’s one Democrat’s disgruntled reaction:

“This is a blank check,” complained Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. “The new money in this bill represents one cave-in too many. It is an endorsement of George Bush’s policy of endless war.”

Even The Associated Press had to acknowledge what happened:

The vote reflected the reluctance by each party to deny money to troops in the field. At the same time, anti-war Democrats had found their position weakened by the decline in violence in Iraq.

Here’s the rundown of the N.C. votes on H.R. 2764:

For: Bob Etheridge (D), Walter Jones (R), Virginia Foxx (R), Heath Shuler (D), Howard Coble (R), Robin Hayes (R), Sue Myrick (R), Patrick McHenry (R).

Against: David Price (D), Mel Watt (D), G.K. Butterfield (D), Brad Miller (D).

UPDATE: Fred Barnes comments on the vote on the Senate side:

An astonishing turnaround occurred in the Senate on Tuesday: 70 senators voted to fund the Iraq war with a fresh $70 billion and no strings attached. Think about this a moment. Last winter, after Democrats captured the Senate and House, it seemed likely they’d succeed in limiting or ending the Iraq war, probably by setting a firm timetable for withdrawal of American troops. After all, both President Bush and the war itself were highly unpopular. The Democratic triumph in the election made that clear, even to those who doubted opinion polls. And Democrats made the anti-Iraq crusade their top priority in the new Congress. Now, the 70-vote approval of the war by the Senate represents the breathtaking dimension of their failure.