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SENATOR PATTY MURRAY IS NO NEWCOMER TO
ADVOCATING FOR VETERANS -- From
Washington Post columnist Lois Romano.

Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) gives "Evil
Eye" to VA Secretary
Jim Nicholson during Senate Hearing.
Story here...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/
28/AR2007032802084.html
Story below:
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Patty Murray, No Newcomer to Advocating for
Veterans
By Lois Romano
Long before the uproar over the long-term medical care of troops
returning home from Iraq made it fashionable to advocate for veterans
rights, Sen. Patty Murray was on the front lines.
The Washington Democrat's father, a disabled World War II veteran, used
a wheelchair most of his life. At 19, she volunteered in a veterans
psychiatric ward during the Vietnam War. But nothing, Murray said,
compares to what she is seeing now.
"It's just amazing to me that we are now in the fifth year of this war
and this administration is still not ready for the large number of
soldiers coming home -- to help them navigate the system and give them
medical attention they need," she said in an interview in the Capitol.
Murray -- the first woman to sit on the Senate Veterans Affairs
Committee, was tapped by Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to take the
lead on veterans care in her caucus. That means she gets thousands of
e-mails from hurting soldiers and she briefs her colleagues every week.
"The mistake would be to call this just a Walter Reed problem," she
said. A Washington Post series last month detailed conditions at a
Walter Reed Army Medical Center facility, including mold and dilapidated
rooms. "If we just go up there and paint the walls and move people out
of the building at Walter Reed," Murray said, "we have ignored thousands
of men and women who are sitting in facilities that are equally
troubling."
She's all too conscious that President Bush is scheduled to visit Walter
Reed tomorrow for the first time since the scandal erupted. She visited
yesterday to get a firsthand view. She said she found impressive care by
dedicated doctors and nurses, but also gravely injured soldiers trying
to navigate a "bureaucratic nightmare" as they try to fathom their next
step.
"They are very worried they are going to get lost again after all the
publicity dies down," she said. "It's a very vivid image for them to see
us drive away."
Murray contends that the reason returning soldiers and veterans are
getting such poor care is that the Bush administration failed to
adequately prepare for the aftermath and length of this war.
"We haven't projected the cost for medical care in anticipation of where
we will be 10 years from now," she said. "If we have 200,000
brain-injured adults today, they will still need care 10 years from
now."
The closest estimate, she said, came when ABC's Bob Woodruff -- who
received a serious head injury in Iraq -- confronted Veterans Affairs
Secretary Jim Nicholson in an interview with research showing that
200,000 veterans may have been treated for injuries from Afghanistan and
Iraq. Nicholson was widely ridiculed by the left for saying that many of
those veterans merely "come in for dental problems."
"Oh, come on," Murray scoffed. " 'Dental problems?' "
"I think there is a country here ready to take pride and ownership of
these soldiers and take care of them," she said, "but they are not being
told what is happening."
Making the Most of the Minority
House Republicans have been tickled with how they have effectively used
a wonky House rule to make some gains on the Democrats.
But House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) threatened to end the joy
ride.
The GOP has on several occasions successfully used what is called "a
motion to recommit," which can return a bill to committee, basically
killing it, or allow an opening to add an (often unrelated) amendment to
the bill.
The goal of Republicans is obviously to sneak in some legislation in the
form of amendments -- and to use the play to pressure vulnerable
Democrats to vote with them or risk political ramifications. The GOP
leadership crowed yesterday that the minority has prevailed with this
maneuver seven times.
Hoyer yesterday accused the minority of using the tactic "to play
politics, not address the substance of the bills that were under
consideration, but offer 'gotcha' amendments, solely designed for
30-second or 60-second ads."
Kevin Smith, spokesman for Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio),
responded: "What should we expect next? Capitol Police arriving at
Republican offices politely requesting that we not introduce certain
legislation?"
They're having way too much fun with this.
Staying Off Colbert's Guest List
Don't hold your breath for Rahm Emanuel to make an appearance on "The
Colbert Report" as Stephen Colbert relentlessly tries to lure House
members to his show to humiliate them. The Illinois Democrat credited
with pushing his party to victory in the House has wisely advised new
members to duck Colbert's invitation, advice he himself is heeding.
Colbert -- well aware of the Emanuel edict -- has invited the
congressman on the show for his comical "Better Know a District" series.
"I can't stay up that late," Emanuel told us this week.
Meanwhile, the District's delegate to the House, Eleanor Holmes Norton,
was the latest legislator to show up on the show -- and she did a fine
job giving it right back to the comedian.
"Why are you undressing me with your eyes?" Colbert demanded.
"Don't flatter yourself, sir!" she shot back.
And when he seemed ill-informed about the legislation to give D.C. a
vote in Congress, she quipped, "Read USA Today instead of looking at the
sex pictures."
Even Colbert laughed at that one.
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Larry Scott --