nittanyalum |
10-07-2008 02:21 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin
(Post 1728186)
I checked it, I saw the "A" list consisted primarily of Democrats, whereas just about all (if not all) of their unacceptable folks were the Republicans who would self-identify as fiscally conservative.
The report card is based upon 22 votes by Congress and how the congressmen voted on those "key" 22 issues. It's not surprising that Republicans would be voting against these bills, drafted by Democrats, with God knows what else in them.
I can't get the website to show me what the particular 22 issues were (it stalls when I query the page), but I'm guessing we don't have links to the full bills or the explanation as to why someone might have voted the way they did and whether their motivation had anything to do with screwing veterans.
|
You can read all the descriptions and all the votes here -- http://www.veteranreportcard.org/reportcard.pdf To be fair, after digging in to the Senate side, McCain was absent for 6 of the votes; of the 4 votes he cast, 3 were 'with' veterans, 1 was 'against'. So they must still be holding the absences as non-support for their issues.
ETA: and to the vote discussed above regarding the GI Bill, read the veterans description of that, it took 3 iterations and three votes on that issue, the veterans saw the Republican push to stop the original bill as "keeping" educational benefits out of reach of veterans because they felt it would help troop retention -- this may be a perspective thing, but some may see that as the worst kind of political manipulation, instead of fulfilling the promises of joining the military, serving and earning the right to education benefits and more options in life, they maneuver to keep soldiers with military as their only option or change the terms of their deal to 'earn' the educational rights previously offered by the GI Bill. I don't see how that can be defined as "pro-military".
|