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Tag Archives: veterans

Vicky Hartzler (r): “Your awl reely stoopit.”

17 Thursday Mar 2022

Posted by Michael Bersin in US Senate

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

chutzpah, HR 3967, Hypocrisy, missouri, right wingnut, U.S. Senate, veterans, Vicky Hartzler

Vicky Hartzler (r) [2021 file photo].

An event scheduled for March 21st in Jefferson City:

[….] Congresswoman Hartzler is hosting a recognition ceremony honoring Vietnam Veterans on Monday, March 21, 2022 in Jefferson City, MO. [….]

Two weeks ago:

FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 57

H R 3967 YEA-AND-NAY 3-Mar-2022 10:59 AM
QUESTION: On Passage
BILL TITLE: Honoring our PACT Act

[….]

—- YEAS 256 —

Bush
Cleaver

—- NAYS 174 —

Graves (MO)
Hartzler
Long
Luetkemeyer
Smith (MO)
Wagner

[….]

[emphasis added]

The bill summary:

Summary: H.R.3967 — 117th Congress (2021-2022)
[….]
Passed House (03/03/2022)
Honoring our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act of 2021 or the Honoring our PACT Act of 2021

This bill addresses health care, presumption of service-connection, research, resources, and other matters related to veterans who were exposed to toxic substances during military service.

The bill provides eligibility for Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical care, including mental health services and counseling, to veterans who (1) participated in a toxic exposure risk activity (a qualifying activity that requires a corresponding entry in an exposure tracking record system), (2) served in specified locations on specified dates, or (3) deployed in support of a specified contingency operation.

The bill establishes the Formal Advisory Committee on Toxic Exposure to assist with the various procedures in establishing or removing presumptions of service-connection.

The bill modifies or establishes the presumption of service-connection for certain conditions or purposes for various groups of veterans.

Among other requirements, the VA must

– provide a veteran with a medical examination regarding the nexus between a disability and toxic exposure risk activity if a veteran submits a disability compensation claim for a service-connected disability with insufficient evidence,
– incorporate a clinical questionnaire to help determine potential toxic exposures as part of the initial screening conducted for veterans with a VA primary care provider, and
– establish a registry for current or past members of the Armed Forces who may have been exposed to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances due to the environmental release of aqueous film-forming foam at a Department of Defense location.

Vicky Hartzler (r) voted “No.” As if anyone would expect anything else.

Offered without further comment

06 Sunday Mar 2022

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

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Tags

8th Congressional District, abortion, access to healthcare, anti-choice, death penalty, Insulin prices, Jason Smith, missouri, right wingnut, social media, Twitter, veterans, War

Jason Smith (r) [2021 file photo]

Rep. Jason Smith @RepJasonSmith
Life begins at conception. As a man of faith, I will always fight for the right to life.
8:01 AM · Mar 6, 2022

Frank Evans @frankevans
Replying to @RepJasonSmith
Life begins when you leave the room. Ask anyone who knows you.
9:22 AM · Mar 6, 2022

The Kochs engineer a “scandal” at the VA

19 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

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Tags

Alicia Mundy, Claire McCaskill, health care, Koch brothers, The Veteran's Administration, VA hospitals, veterans

An article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (4/14) lamented the fact that the local VA hospital was having trouble finding anyone to take the facility’s medical director position. The article cited two main reasons for this situation.

First, was the issue of pay. The Post-Dispatch pointed out that while a similar position in the private sector would pay in the vicinity of $349,000 a year, directors at the the VA have a salary range of $121,956 to $183,300. I don’t know about you, but I’m pretty sure that a salary of about half the going rate isn’t going to get many takers. We all know, too, that those who are willing to work for less might not be quite the very best talent that can be found.

Second, the article pointed out that there has been lots of publicity about shortfalls in VA service over the past couple of years, resulting in lots of heated rhetoric and excessive political meddling in the VA’s management . Nobody wants an underpaid job where oversight means your efforts to succeed will undermined by demogogues and micromanagers who seem to be looking for reasons to cut funding essential VA funding.

It is not really surprising that administrators at the VA are underpaid relative to the market. One need only look at the spending cuts that congressional Republicans wrung out of the Obama administration since 2010 to understand that more than administrative pay may have been compromised by the indiscriminate GOP budget ax – and at a time when the VA system has had to accommodate a large influx of wounded veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. The most recent Republican appropriation was $1.7 billion below the amount requested by the president.

Given the state of VA funding, more is at stake than administrative salaries; a corresponding slippage in service levels would not be surprising. And there have indeed been reports of long delays in receiving service which, if the stories are to be believed have in some cases resulted in the deaths of those on the waiting list.

Nevertheless, despite the prevalence of such horror stories in the media, a large majority of veterans respond positively (pdf) to surveys about their care in VA hospitals (see also here). A report by Alicia Mundy in the Washington Monthly, “The VA is not broken – yet,” quotes from several recent studies that find “the VA still generally outperforms or matches the rest of the health care system on most measures of quality.”

How do we explain the apparent contradiction between surveys that report high levels of patient satisfaction and the widely disseminated stories of VA failures? Is it possible that the VA horror stories might not be true? Mundy tells us unequivocally that this is indeed the case. Kevin Drum succinctly summarizes her findings:

There were some problems in Phoenix, where employees had gamed the system for recording wait times. However, there was no evidence that this problem was widespread; there was no evidence that it caused any deaths; and there was no evidence that care had been compromised.

Mundy assigns blame for the false accusations to free-market Republicans, who abhor the VA as a bastion of socialism, along with health-care businesses that hope to profit if the VA medical system is privatized. In particular, she singles out the Concerned Veterans for America (CVA), a creation of – who else – the Koch brothers, as an important player in the effort to create a false sense of crisis at the VA:

… Seldom, however, has one of their investments paid off so spectacularly well as it has on the issue of veterans’ health care. Working through the CVA, and in partnership with key Republicans and corporate medical interests, the Koch brothers’ web of affiliates has succeeded in manufacturing or vastly exaggerating “scandals” at the VA as part of a larger campaign to delegitimize publicly provided health care.

The CVA smear provides cover for GOP fellow-travelers so that they can face down the numerous veterans groups that have reacted with horror at the suggestion that VA medical services may be privatized. They have also managed to stampede some of the centrist, red or reddish state Democrats – like our own Senator Claire McCaskill – who are perpetually trying to prove to closed-minded conservative constituents that they are open-minded enough to entertain criticisms of liberal institutions. right wing fantasies.

Mcaskill was gung-ho when it came to 2014 legislation to “reform” the VA system which gave us the ill-considered and unsuccessful Choice Card that allows veterans to get private care on the VA dime, as well as setting up a commission to make recommendations about further “reform.” Many of the members of this commission have a partisan bias against the VA; they include members from health care industries that stand to profit from privatization of VA services and the CVA itself. The only groups not represented are veterans organizations that strongly support the VA.

Although McCaskill has been more than ready to endorse the “broken VA” storyline, her actual proposals seem to have been modest and fairly reasonable and, to my knowledge at least, she hasn’t indulged in privatization rhetoric. There’s reason to hope she’ll pick up on the GOP con and will have the courage to resist it even though it seems tailor-made for certain noisy Missouri constituencies. We’ll need her if the VA, one of our government’s success stories, is to survive this most recent, dishonest onslaught. As the saying goes, “if you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.”

N.B. I would suggest that you read the Mundy Report, and Paul Glastris’ response to conservative criticisms of the Mundy report. They’re all relatively short. If you’re interested in the political process currently underway, this Boston Globe article will be of interest, along with this article from The American Prospect

Can the leopard (Roy Blunt) change its money-grubbing spots?

24 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

campaign ads, Electon 2016, Federation of American Hospitals, Jason Kander, missouri, Roy Blunt, veterans

So last Thursday (11/19) readers of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch were treated to a quarter-page ad that proclaimed in large letters “thank You Senator Blunt for protecting access to patient care.” The ad was paid for by the Federation of American Hospitals, a for-profit hospital lobbying group.

As near as I can make out Blunt’s service to the group consisted of advocacy against cutting down the federal subsidy that compensates for Medicare “bad debt.” This is the debt that occurs when Medicare beneficiaries cannot manage co-pays or other Republican-sponsored (and Blunt endorsed) outlays designed to make sure that our elderly have “got skin in the game.”

Laudable, right? But bear in mind that this is the same Senator Blunt who just a few years ago proclaimed that, “We’ve had Medicare since 1965, and Medicare has never done anything to make people more healthy.” It’s also the same Roy Blunt who has voted against just about any expansion of healthcare that hasn’t involved a subsidy to healthcare industry beneficiaries – folks who, incidentally, have done quite a lot of good for ol’ Roy in their turn. Healthcare industries and Big Pharma account for quite a sizable chunk of Blunt’s campaign dosh.

Not too different from Karl Rove’s PAC ads that tried to paint the Senator as a defender of veterans – the same Roy Blunt who voted over and over again against the best interests of veterans (see here and here for examples).

So what’s going on? Could it  have anything to do with the election next year which Roy is going into with a Senate approval ranking of 84 from the top? That’s 16 from the lowest posible ranking. Maybe a few of Roy’s constituents have finally caught on about who it is Roy seeks to serve.

Or it might possibly reflect the fact that Roy has some real competition this time around in the person of a actual veteran, Jason Kander? Somebody who just might not only try to walk the caring walk only during the few months before a possibly difficult  election, but every day, as a matter of principle.

 

Roy Blunt votes to deny jobs to veterans

19 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

Claire McCaskill, job creation, missouri, Roy Blunt, veterans, Veterans Job Corps Act of 2012

Today the senate rejected a bill that would have created jobs for returning veterans:

As proposals go, this should have been a no-brainer. The Veterans Job Corps Act of 2012, sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), sought to lower unemployment among military veterans, giving grants to federal, state, and local agencies, which in turn would hire veterans — giving priority to those who served on or after 9/11 — to work as first-responders and in conservation jobs at national parks.

The bill was fully paid for, and entirely bipartisan — Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) had his own set of ideas for the bill, and Murray incorporated all of them into her legislation.

Unfortunately, the only no-brainers in the Senate seem to be the members of the Grand Obstructionist Party, GOP to you and me. The bill actually passed, 58-40, but nowadays a fillibuster-proof 60 votes is always required to get anything through the Senate. Missouri’s own Senate GOPer, Roy Blunt, who campaigned on a platform of job creation, affirmed his essential GOPness today in spades when he voted against this job-creating legislation. It might behoove some of the folks who voted for Senator Blunt to ask him why he won’t sign on to a upfront paid-for jobs bill for veterans, the folks who actually fought in the unpaid-for little wars he helped W. execute?

Just guessing, but it would fit the GOP profile if Blunt answered with some cockamamy story about forestalling that old GOP bugaboo, the culture of dependency, or growing government,  or maybe with the implication that government jobs, in this case sorely needed policemen and firemen, are not real, or “solid” jobs. These guys, after all, insist that government doesn’t need to do anything for anyone but the rich guys  who will then take care of creating our jobs.

Nevertheless, one wonders. Could it have been that Blunt also shares his party’s concern that the economy might perk up a little more before the election and undo all their hard work during the past four years? Nor will it necessarily be that good for the anti-union proclivities of those “small” business job creators Blunt touts, who, based on his legislative priorities, don’t seem to be that small, and who wouldn’t be able to depend on a totally desperate and malleable work force if veterans returned to good, public sector jobs.

Claire Mccaskill, by the way, did the right thing and voted to help employ returning veterans while providing for a community need. Of course, for McCaskill, it’s only one more manifestation of her ongoing support for veterans. She doesn’t just talk tough about the need for a strong defense when it comes to shoveling money to defense contractors, she’s there to support the guys who provide the defense.

 

Claire McCaskill lists the voting record of Todd Akin on veterans’ issues

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

2012, Claire McCaskill, missouri, Senate, Todd Akin, veterans

In Warrensburg, on Friday, August 24, 2012:

Video by Jerry Schmidt

Previously:

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): “Vets For Claire” listening tour in Parkville (August 24, 2012)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): “Vets For Claire” listening tour in Columbia (August 25, 2012)

Claire McCaskill – Todd Akins stays in race! Video by Jerry Schmidt (August 26, 2012)

Rep. Stephen Webber (D): on Sen. Claire McCaskill (D) and her support for veterans

26 Sunday Aug 2012

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

2012, Claire McCaskill, missouri, Senate, Stephen Webber, Todd Akin, veterans

Previously:

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): “Vets For Claire” listening tour in Columbia (August 25, 2012)

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): “Vets For Claire” listening tour in Parkville (August 24, 2012)

Representative Stephen Webber (D) at Senator Claire McCaskill’s (D) “Vets for Claire” event in Columbia on Saturday, August 25, 2012.

Representative Stephen Webber (D) is a veteran who spent two tours in Iraq as a Marine Infantryman. He represents Columbia as a member of the House in the Missouri General Assembly and is seeking reelection for a third term.

Yesterday, after Senator Claire McCaskill’s veterans’ event in Columbia, Representative Webber took a few moments to speak with us:

Show Me Progress: As a, as a Democratic office holder and veteran how do you reconcile the difference in the Republican Party when it comes to rhetoric and actual practice on veterans issues?

Representative Stephen Webber (D): It’s incredibly frustrating. And there are, part of the, part of the problem is that everybody assumes that every, you know, office holder’s gonna support veterans. And so they don’t look at the record. And that’s not factually what’s happened. And I can give you very specific, specific examples at the state level of, uh, veterans bills that I’ve had. Uh, for example, um, what that said, state employees, if they were activated, if they were in the National Guard and they were in the Reserves, the state would make up the difference in their pay. Um, ’cause there was a problem with judges getting a full military salary and a full judicial salary, but Highway Patrol officers getting activated and losing money, having a hard time making their mortgage. Um, that was, make sure their pay stays equal. And it was killed in the Veterans Committee, Republicans voted against it in the House Veterans Committee.  Um, and it’s just frustrating.

Show Me Progress: So, and in the discussions about bills like that what, what reasoning is given for defeating those, these kinds of bills?

Representative Webber: The argument that I was told was that, um, they thought it was unfair to help veterans that were active, reservists that were state employees and not help, uh, ones in the private sector. Um, by that logic, their logic, every state employee ought to be making minimum wage and no benefits. Uh, because any time you give anything to any state employee, uh, you’re, you’re putting them at an advantage versus private sector folks. I mean, that’s, that’s illogical reasoning. Uh, it’s, it’s also, you know, I’d be happy to try and expand it to everybody in the private sector, but, I mean, there, there’s no way they’re gonna consider that either, so.

Show Me Progress: And, and you, you spoke very eloquently, uh, about, uh, about Senator McCaskill’s support for veterans and veterans issues. Uh, at the, at the national level and with the candidates in, in Missouri who run, uh, you know, at the national level, uh, is, is this the norm?

Representative Webber: You know, I, I think the Republicans are continually, their rhetoric is the norm. Uh, I think Democrats do try to take substantive actions. Uh, I think Claire McCaskill has probably gone above and beyond even what most Democrats do. Um, she’s really made it personal. Um, she’s really, I mean, you can see when you ask her questions, she knows the  policies, not just the, the top level policies, she knows more of the internal policies. Um, and I think she’s been a real leader on that.

And it’s frustrating, because, you know, a lot of these ideas, like the ideas about expanding the GI Bill have been around for a long time. The Republicans had every opportunity to pass that when they were in charge of the House and Senate. They didn’t do it. So, it is the norm for them to ignore these issues.

Show Me Progress: All, right, thank you very much for your time.

Representative Webber: Absolutely.

Supporting veteran homes?!?!!!

23 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

Hoskins, taxes, veterans

I just got a survey, paid for with taxpayer money, from by Republican State Representative, Denny Hoskins (R-121).

It touches all of the red meat issues of the Republicans: Right-to-work, teacher tenure, teacher pay based on merit, making sure unions don’t spend dues on political issues, etc.

The only question about taxes is for roads.

However, the issue that is most interesting is the question about increasing funding for veteran homes.

As WE ALL KNOW, we must honor our veterans.  The survey notes that funding for veteran homes are such that, if we don’t increase funding, one of the homes might close.

I’m asked whether we should institute a lottery dedicated to supporting veteran homes.

All I can say is “wow”!

It is sooooooooooo important to show how grateful we are for veterans that we are going to fund them by proceeds from gambling. I wonder why Hoskins didn’t suggest a dedicated bake sale.

Oh, did I mention there was no question about increasing the cigarette tax, establishing a tax on internet saies, or any other general revenue tax (except for roads)?    

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): veteran town hall forums on June 1st and 2nd

31 Monday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Claire McCaskill, missouri, town halls, veterans

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) will be holding six town hall forums in Missouri in Missouri this week. The press release:

McCaskill Holds Veterans Town Hall Forums

May 27, 2010

On June 1st and 2nd, Senator Claire McCaskill is hosting six veterans town hall forums across the state to hear directly from Missourians about what Washington can do to ensure our veterans receive the care and treatment they deserve.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

St. Louis County

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 3944

10815 Midland Boulevard

St. Louis, MO

9:15 AM – 10:15 AM

Franklin County

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 2482

1087 N. Service Road

St. Clair, MO

12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

Springfield

American Legion Post 69

149 Memorial Plaza

Springfield, MO

4:00 PM – 5:00 PM

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Smithville

American Legion Post 58

2607 E. 92 Hwy

Smithville, Missouri

12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

St. Joseph

Pony Express Post 359

4826 Frederick Ave

St. Joseph, MO

2:15 PM – 3:15 PM

Columbia

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 280

1509 Ashley Road

Columbia, MO 65201

5:30 PM – 6:30 PM

Constituents are highly encouraged to register for the events so our office can anticipate the number of people to expect. Depending on the turn-out, there may be more people wishing to attend the event than there is capacity. Seating will be first-come, first-serve.

Individuals with disabilities who require auxiliary aids or services to participate in this event should contact Jo Middleton at 314-367-1364 no later than May 28.

For additional information, please contact one of McCaskill’s five Missouri offices.

This will definitely be more civilized than the town halls of last August.

Representative Denny Hoskins (r): supporting gaming, veterans, or higher ed? Bingo!

14 Tuesday Jul 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Denny Hoskins, General Assembly, HB 492, HB620/671, Jay Nixon, missouri, veterans, veto

Governor Jay Nixon (D) vetoed HB 620 & 671, Representative Denny Hoskins’ (r – noun, verb, CPA) favorite bingo bill today. Governor Nixon’s veto letter [pdf] included the following explanation:

…House Committee Substitute for House Bill Nos. 620 & 671 will reduce proceeds to the Bingo Proceeds for Education Fund by approximately $2.2 million annually. This reduction in education funding will have significant negative fiscal impact on the Missouri Schools for the Deaf, Blind, and severely Disabled.

In addition, the fiscal year 2010 budget appropriates $300,000 from the Bingo Proceeds for education Fund to the University of Missouri for planning and design of a new Nursing and Optometry School on the campus of the University of Missouri-St. Louis and $300,000 to the University of Missouri for planning and design for a new Nursing/Health Professions School on the campus of the University of Missouri-Columbia.

In light of current fiscal conditions, this reduction to education funding cannot be absorbed.

In addition, House Committee Substitute for House Bill Nos. 620 & 671 authorizes the use of “electronic bingo card monitoring devices.” The bill fails to define this term, an ambiguity which could lead to uncertain future interpretation. The lack of a specific definition could lead to a significant expansion of gaming activities in the state…

[emphasis added]

There’s a certain irony that the House member bestowed with the bogus “Freshman Legislator of the Year for Higher Education” award by his republican colleagues (they hand out these fake awards like candy on Halloween) doing his darnedest to cut funding for higher education.

But, there’s more. Representative Hoskins was so upset that he immediately issued a press release, complete with quotes. I wonder if he had ’em all lined up and ready to go? Just asking. The press release:

PRESS RELEASE

Missouri House of Representatives

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 13, 2009

CONTACT: Rep. Denny Hoskins…

Governor Nixon Vetoes Bill to Help Warrensburg Veterans Home

Jefferson City – Governor Nixon vetoed HB 620/671 today, commonly referred to as the Bingo Bill.  The house bill sponsored by Rep. Denny Hoskins, R-Warrensburg, and carried in the senate by Senator Pearce, R-Warrensburg, would have helped not-for-profit organizations continue to host bingo games and provide financial support to their local communities.

Under Missouri law, only not-for-profit organizations such as the American Legion, VFW, Eagles, Elks, etc. can operate bingo games.  Among the potential changes to the laws governing bingo, the bill would have increased the number of days that bingo halls could host games.  Halls with full licenses would have been allowed to host games twice a week.  In addition, the bill would have eliminated the collection of state taxes on bingo cards.  The sponsoring not-for-profit organizations use the revenues from bingo games for activities in their local communities.

Rep. Hoskins worked with David Tackett, who runs the Bingo games at the Warrensburg American Legion, to draft the bill.

“I’m very disappointed in the Governor’s decision,” commented Mr. Tackett. “Passage of this bill would have provided approximately $7,000 more for us to use for local projects such as the Warrensburg Veterans Home, American Legion baseball fields and parking lot, Big Brothers Big Sisters and sponsorships for Missouri’s Boy’s State and Girl’s State programs. As the number of bingo licensees decline, our local communities and the programs we support will suffer.”

Revenues from the state taxes collected on bingo cards have seen a significant decrease since 1995.  In fiscal year 2009, the State of Missouri collected approximately $2.0 million in state bingo taxes compared to $3.9 million in 1995.  The number of bingo licensee operators has also decreased from over 900 licensees in 1995 to 367 licensees this past year.

“Per my discussion with the Missouri Gaming Commission, proceeds to the State of Missouri from casino gaming were up 4% this past year.  This would have been more than enough to offset the state bingo taxes,” stated Rep. Hoskins. “I definitely disagree with the Governor’s decision to veto my bill.  My dad always says ‘A Hoskins’ never gives up.’  Without a doubt, I’ll be in discussions with House and Senate leadership about the possibility of overriding Governor Nixon’s veto.  We need to pass this legislation to support our veterans and local community programs.”

[emphasis added to title]

On one hand $7,000 for local charities – on the other hand “…significant negative fiscal impact on the Missouri Schools for the Deaf, Blind, and severely Disabled…” I’m thinking it over.

So, Representative Hoskins claims he’s a friend of veterans? Not so fast, he voted against HB 492 in committee:

Missouri House Veterans Committee Shoots Down Support for Reservists

by: Brandon Friedman

Wed Apr 08, 2009 at 09:15:00 AM EDT

A few months ago, we wrote about the military families legislative package proposed by Missouri state Reps.  Stephen Webber (D-Columbia) and Jason Kander (D-Kansas City).  Webber is a former Marine reservist who served two tours in Iraq and Kander is an Army reservist who served in Afghanistan.  They were both named VoteVets.org Emerging Leaders last year and won election to the House in November.  Today, a central piece of that legislative package died in committee by a one-vote margin.

House Bill 492, sponsored by Webber and Kander, would have helped state employees in the Reserve or National Guard by making up the difference between their military pay and what they earn in their work for the state…

…Voting against the bill were two freshman Republicans–Reps. Denny Hoskins (R-Warrensburg) and Scott Largent (R-Clinton).  Either Hoskins or Largent could have saved the measure.  Largent is the Vice-Chairman of the committee, so one wonders why he would take such an anti-military family position.  Hoskins represents a district that includes Whiteman Air Force Base, so I doubt his constituents would be thrilled with his vote either…

[emphasis added]

Hmm. “…I doubt his constituents would be thrilled with his vote either…”

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