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TIME MAGAZINE ASKS: DOES McCAIN HAVE A VETS PROBLEM?
-- "Senator McCain clearly needs to be recognized
for his
military service...but when it actually comes to
delivering
health care and benefits during war, Senator
McCain's
going to have some explaining to do."

John McCain talks with members of
Alabama Veterans of Foreign Wars. (photo: Rob Carr / AP) |
For more about Sen. John McCain, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=john+mccain&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.time.com/time/
politics/article/0,8599,1808161,00.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Does McCain Have a Vets Problem?
By Jay Newton-Small/Washington
Of all the voting groups John McCain will target this fall, none would
seem like more of a sure thing than this country's war veterans. So why is
the celebrated Vietnam War hero and POW bracing for a potentially bad week
with so many men and women who have served in uniform?
The point of contention between the two seemingly natural allies is a
piece of legislation the Senate is expected to vote on this week to update
the 1944 G.I. Bill to provide expanded education assistance and
opportunities to the armed forces. The bill, co-sponsored by two other
Vietnam veterans in the Senate, Republican Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and
Democrat Jim Webb of Virginia, would effectively provide full tuition and
housing costs at a four-year public university for veterans who have
served at least three years of active duty. Given his family's and his own
long and distinguished service career, the bill would seem like a natural
fit for the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. But McCain,
concerned about the estimated $4 billion annual price tag and the
incentive he worries it might give people to leave an already strapped
military, has sponsored his own competing proposal. It increases the
existing monthly education benefit from around $1,100 to $1,500 a month
while adding more generous benefits for those who've served more than 12
years.
McCain's concerns, however, don't seem to impress the vast majority of
veterans' organizations. They are feverishly lobbying him to support the
Webb and Hagel bill, which simply adds the new program's expense to the
$165 billion annual emergency war supplemental, a move President George W.
Bush has threatened to veto. (The House version offsets the program by
increasing taxes by 0.5% on those individuals who earn more than $500,000
a year and couples who earn more than $1 million, a move also under veto
threat.) "This isn't about anything partisan; we are firmly supporting the
bill that does right by the veterans, does right by the troops, and that
is not McCain's bill," said Ramona Joyce, a spokeswoman for the American
Legion. "It could do McCain damage with veteran voters if this issue drags
out."
Even with the current dustup, it's hard to
imagine John McCain not winning the majority of the veterans vote in
November. But the nation's 26 million veterans are by no means a
monolithic voting bloc, and any level of disappointment with McCain could
sway some undecideds. The Democratic National Committee is already
gleefully preparing TV spots about McCain's position on the Senate bill.
And, sensing a vulnerability in McCain's seemingly greatest strength, some
Democratic strategists are already contemplating what other veterans votes
they can bring up this year.
Obama, who sits on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, has already won
some support from many Iraq and Afghanistan vets who oppose the war in
Iraq, and has been actively trying to expand his appeal to older veterans
— though his efforts in that regard didn't help him in the primaries in
veteran-heavy states like Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. To
underline his own family's military pedigree, Obama plans a trip in coming
weeks to the Punchbowl National Cemetery in Hawaii, where his grandfather,
who served in World War II, is buried. Obama and McCain's G.O.P. rival,
the antiwar presidential candidate Congressman Ron Paul, actually beat
McCain in donations from the four branches of active military this year,
according to a study by the Center for Responsive Politics.
This
is not the first time McCain, who has a proud history of opposing what he
views as excessive government spending, has found himself at odds with his
fellow veterans on legislation. He's voted for veterans funding bills only
30% of the time, according to a scorecard of roll-call votes put out by
the nonpartisan Disabled Americans for America. Under the same system
Obama has a 90% rating — though, of course, he has spent a much shorter
time in Washington. "Senator McCain clearly needs to be recognized for his
military service and in some respects that will play to his advantage, but
when it actually comes to delivering health care and benefits during war,
Senator McCain's going to have some explaining to do," said Paul Sullivan,
director of the nonpartisan Veterans for Common Sense.
Supporters of Webb and Hagel's bill dismiss McCain's concerns about the
retention issue. While the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the
bill would cause a 16% drop in re-enlistment rates across all four
branches of the military, the same study also predicts a 16% uptick in new
recruits attracted by the benefit. The bill has 58 co-sponsors, including
none other than Obama — just two shy of a veto-proof majority. It was
passed last week by the House with a comfortable veto-proof majority, but
as an amendment to the emergency war supplemental, it could be altered as
the two chambers hammer out differences between the two versions. McCain's
office is confident that in the reconciliation process a compromise can be
worked out. "We're negotiating in good faith and we think they are as
well. We want to do something for veterans. We're really working hard to
accomplish our goal," said Mark Buse, McCain's Senate chief of staff.
Webb, who has yet to endorse a presidential candidate but is rumored to be
on Obama's vice presidential shortlist, might have been more open to talks
until last week. After the two camps met but failed to come to a
resolution on their differences, McCain's allies moved to attach his
version — which has nine G.O.P. co-sponsors — to an unrelated bill on the
Senate floor. The Senate came to a grinding halt for two hours as Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid worked to remove McCain's amendment; eventually
it was tabled by a vote of 56-42. But the tactic created no good will with
Webb's staff. "At this point we were really not in the position to
negotiate," said Jess Smith, a spokeswoman for Webb. "We're sticking to
our guns that our bill will take care of our vets; incentivizing long-term
military service is not the top aim of this bill."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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