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VA Ban on Voter Registration Drives for Injured Vets Becomes National Fight

By Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet. Posted July 18, 2008.


The Secretary of Veterans Affairs rejects a request by 19 secretaries of state to allow voter registration drives on VA facilities.
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The Department of Veterans Affairs, which oversees medical care for injured veterans, is locked in a growing dispute with 19 secretaries of state -- Democrats and Republicans -- who are urging the federal agency to allow voter registration drives for former soldiers living at its facilities.

In a letter this week to Connecticut Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz, who earlier this month was barred from registering voters at a VA facility and has since been organizing top state election officials, Secretary of Veterans Affairs James B. Peake said his agency would not allow registration drives unless "these efforts be coordinated through the VA Voluntary Service (VAVS) office at each VA medical center."

"This policy is the result of careful deliberation and consideration for the needs and rights of our patients, concerns about disrupting facility operations, and the need to ensure VA is not involved in partisan political activities," Peake wrote in his July 15, 2008, letter.

Voter registration advocates said the VA policy will not help injured veterans to vote.

"It's official. State officials cannot help veterans vote," said Scott Rafferty, a Washington, D.C., attorney who has been fighting the VA in court to allow voter registration drives at its Menlo Park campus in northern California. "No one, except fingerprinted volunteers, can tell them anything about elections -- and only if they ask."

"No VA staff can help. That's been made clear, too," he said. "It's unbelievable."

Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, criticized the latest VA policy.

"VA just threw up their hands and surrendered the voting rights for possibly hundreds of thousands of our veterans," he said. "VA’s weak and indefensible position is all the more striking, shocking, and shameful due the fact some of our veterans now in VA facilities are recovering from battle wounds from Iraq and Afghanistan."

Bysiewicz could not be reached for comment Thursday, but her spokesman Av Harris said the Connecticut secretary of state intended to hold a press conference on Friday addressing the VA's response.

The VA's response to Bysiewicz and 18 other top state election officials is the latest volley in an escalating national political fight that may not be settled by either the VA or secretaries of state, but instead will require federal legislation or a federal court ruling.

In recent weeks, several top U.S. senators with jurisdiction over veterans' issues have urged the VA to change its policy to enable more former soldiers to vote in the 2008 election. Those efforts have included a rebuke by Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, Senate Veterans Affairs Committee chair, telling the VA that its claim that voter registration drives were "partisan" was unacceptable.

Meanwhile, the California lawsuit involving the VA's Menlo Park facility is in the final stages of an appeals process, and a federal court is expected to issue its ruling in the near future. That ruling, should it permit registration drives, could have a more immediate effect than new federal legislation that would have to go through the law-making process.

Other developments this week also confirmed that the issue is becoming a national concern -- and increasingly politicized.

The National Association of Secretaries of State also forwarded Peake's letters to all top state election officials and said in an accompanying letter that it hoped the organization could pass a resolution on this issue at its upcoming semiannual meeting later this month.

The 19 states calling on the VA to allow registration drives are: Connecticut, Washington, Minnesota, Maine, Vermont, Montana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Iowa, Missouri, Idaho, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, North Carolina, West Virginia, Ohio, New Hampshire and Oregon. The District of Columbia has joined the effort as well.

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See more stories tagged with: va, voter registration, voter suppression, veterans affairs

Steven Rosenfeld is a senior fellow at Alternet.org and co-author of "What Happened in Ohio: A Documentary Record of Theft and Fraud in the 2004 Election," with Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman (The New Press, 2006).

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View:
VAVS organizes Bingo games
Posted by: 8 nontheist on Jul 18, 2008 3:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Secty of VA Peake is having another fit of pique about the agents of the several states daring to bring democracy to VA's patients by going into VA hospitals to register veterans as voters. Everbody knows that each VA facility is the private fief of a VA facility's direct who rules by fiat. The VA Voluntary Service is a fun & games out who books bingo games, ice cream socials, hymn sings to 'entertain' patients weather the patients want to be entertained or not. All too often the VA's volunteers are aged lady bountifils who are bent upon 'cheering up' the boys with childish talk, stupid games & worthless trinkets. The VA's volunteers feign distress when a veteran doesn't play their childish games & asserts his right to personal privacy. Frequently the VA's volunteers wheedle a veteran to play their silly games when a veteran says no thank you. Sometimes a patient can summon a nurse to tell the volunteer that the veteran wants privacy, peace & rest not entertainment. At other times the nurse will do nothing & let the volunteer annoy a veteran with a spiel.
The VAVS is a fun & games outfit, nothing more. It seems that the VA is afraid to let veterans act like adults by voting, declining to play silly games & asking a lady bountiful volunteer to respect the veterans right to personal privacy when a veteran quietly tells the volunteer that he isn't interested in playing games & asks the volunteer to leave him alone.
The VA' volunteers aren't qualified to aid veterans to register to vote & most of them don't want to do it. It is past time to remove the Secratry of VA from office. This man allowed Walter Reed Army Hospital to become a hell hole before he retired from the army.
Maybe a new president will appoint a qualified person to become Secretary of VA who is able to treat veterans like adults.

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Okay, Been up all night so if I skimmed over something pertinent, calm down..
Posted by: Turiye on Jul 18, 2008 3:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am fingerprinted, I am a Vet but DO NOT WORK FOR THE V.A., I have room in my car for quite a few, but it's because they aren't allowed to leave, as well? Better not be. So they must stay we have to be part of what was it, VOVS, yet only allowed to say a thing if they ask. I may have the mnemonic wrong, so I'll just see if I can become one of those and the rest I have covered, so THEY CAN PISS OFF, not allowing Vets to vote, I'll find a way.

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So
Posted by: bobtr900 on Jul 18, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So the Bushie Rethugs are afraid of politicizing the VA and afraid of politicizing vets. Wow. Since when have the Bushie Rethugs ever been reticent to politicizing anything. They will stop at nothing, they politicize everything, even religion. Albeit, they politicize with the full complicity of those religions.

Why are they afraid of politicizing vets. Don't vets always vote Republican. Could it be that the Bushies know something we, on the left, do not. Are injured and disabled vets more likely to vote Dem.

And once again the plot thickens. and maybe another Repub myth bites the dust.

Is their house of cards getting shaky. Has or is their tower of Babal coming down or at least weakening. Is their monolithic monolith, the black obelisk of their evil ways deteriorating even further.

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IS THIS FAIR TO THE SOLDIERS OR THE POLITICIANS?
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jul 18, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone already registered can request an absentee ballot thru the mail. Help is available for those who need it. Perhaps voter registration should be part of the paperwork required to enlist. Patients in a Veteran's Hospital shouldn't be subjected to "drives" of any kind. It's too much like campaigning and puts the patients on display. They deserve more respect. Think about their votes before they're sent to some god awful place to begin with. Once they're back home in a hospital anything political can be interpreted as downright insulting. Thanks, ANNA

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This is not a political or religious motivated decision
Posted by: pacer on Jul 18, 2008 11:17 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please do not refer to this as partisan politics. Veterans are of different race, color, creed, religions and political parties. If the veteran is not already registered he/she can right after they are released from the hospital.

Can anyone see how the VA is actually protecting the rights of these injured veterans while they are hospitalized in their care? After an out-patient operation or just a mild sedation to have teeth extracted the patient beforehand has to sign a paper which tells them not to sign their name to any documentation, make any financial decision or even drive a vehicle for the next twenty-four hours. These injured patients at the VA are more than likely on many various medications, which in turn would allow them to be more easily persuaded to sign their name to something they would normally not agree with. So in essence the VA is protecting the rights of the disabled and medicated veterans staying at the VA under their care and protection.


Look at how heated an argument on politics can get just on-line. Face to face in person I have watched actual fights break out, and right or wrong the security police at the VA has better things to do than stop an actual fight over some ones politics. I just wish that over medicated outpatient veterans had the same protection when it comes to signing loans from predatory lenders and car salesmen/politicians.

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Wisconsin Must Take Part
Posted by: JonA on Jul 18, 2008 11:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why hasn't Wisconsin, and all the other States, joined this patriotic endeavor vocationing the VA to allow voter registration in all VA facilities. Come-on everyone... do something to have your State join in allowing our wounded Veterans to participate in our Democracy. And Governer James Doyle Jr, I request that you consider to add our State of Wisconsin to this important list of States. Thank you Gov. Doyle

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not so fast
Posted by: zing on Jul 18, 2008 12:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i've participated and organized voter registration drives and they are NOT like campaigning, so i can only assume you do not have experience with GOTV (get out the vote). letting VA patients and residents know that a table with people who will give them a voter registration form and assist them in filling it out if they require and ask for assistance will be at X location on X date from noon to 4 p.m. doesn't put anyone on display, and it's hardly intrusive. if vets who couldn't go to the registration table were told it would be there and that they could request a form be brought to them, that, again, is not intrusive. there are vets who actually live in various va facilities, so your assumption that this would happen only in a hospital setting is erroneous. voter registration drives are carried out in high schools and hospitals, retirement communities, churches, libraries and many other public and private venues. helping those who have served our country by registering them to vote seems pretty patriotic to me.

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Just a thought
Posted by: Captainmagic on Jul 18, 2008 2:49 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Im not of your country or army and i was just pondering a thought. That is perhaps it's not in the best interests of your soldiers to have assistance with the vote as they may not look favourably on the government elect. The vet might have a grudge against the army or those that he may rightly or wrongly blame for his predicament. The GOP might then percieve this to be a threat to their chances and just maybe they would rather a dead soldier (one who can't vote) to an unhappy soldier who can, so lets not provide said soldier with any assistance.

If a soldier has lost with his heart mind and body and the cause was not a Just cause, then any GOP would have to think about a backlash or two at the ballot box.

Who more so than most, understand the cost of being missguided, lied to, and deceived.

For What for Whom.

America do not be so asleep.

Regards Captain

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» RE: Duh! Posted by: peacefullaim
Republicans Dis Veterans
Posted by: Denver Dem on Jul 18, 2008 4:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anytime any one neocon says the military is backing Bush and Mccain 100%, just point this little article out.

Granted they won't admit it proves anything, but it will still be a killer argument.

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