Roll Call,
May 19, 2004
Military Recruits
PAC Seeks to Elect More Veterans
BY Amy Keller
Roll Call Staff
Retired Rear Adm. James Carey is on a mission.
As chairman of the National Defense Political Action Committee,
he's executing war plans to try to boost the number of military
veterans serving in Congress.
"We want more people who've slept in a foxhole ... someone
who knows what it's like to stand watch 18 hours a day when you're
60 days at sea," says Carey, a decorated Vietnam War veteran
who went on to become vice chairman of the U.S. Federal Maritime
Commission in the 1980s.
By all accounts, Members with military experience are a vanishing
breed.
While the percentage of veterans in Congress in the 1970s was
the highest in U.S. history - in 1971, 75 percent of all House
lawmakers had served in the military due in large part to World
War II and the Korean War - today the number of veterans serving
in both the Senate and House has plummeted to around 31 percent.
According to the House Veterans Affairs Committee, there are
167 lawmakers on Capitol Hill with military experience - 128 in
the House and 39 in the Senate - but Carey said he and many of
his comrades would like to see more people who've served in the
military.
He's not alone.
University of Maine Law School professor Donald Zillman, who
once served as a distinguished visiting professor at West Point
and was a member of the Army Judge Advocate General Corps, recently
called the 108th Congress the "least militarily connected
Congress in decades."
The implications, he wrote, are staggering - especially now.
"The legislator who has commanded a small unit in battle,
flown combat missions, organized medical care for mass casualties
or shipped supplies to a war zone possess valuable practical insights
for a Congress that will guide the war on terrorism and ... [the]
war with Iraq," Zillman wrote in a press release for the
university.
He noted that military veterans can help to educate their non-veteran
colleagues on issues of military importance and serve as a reality
check for organization and individuals trying to influence these
policy areas.
Rep. Rob Simmons (R-Conn.), a member of the Armed Services Committee,
told the Armed Forces Journal in 2002 that his military service
made his job in Congress easier.
"As you know I sit on the Armed Forces readiness subcommittee,"
he said. "Recently, we had to discuss environmental issues
facing our military in various 'hot spots.' I called upon my experience
in the Army and the [CIA] to give me a better understanding in
knowing what our military forces are going to face, to set forth
realistic training requirements and make sound decisions."
In his 1997 book "Making the Corps," Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Thomas Ricks touted the importance of military experience
in the legislative process - but noted that it is sadly lacking.
"For most [Members of Congress], what they know of the military
is what they saw on television during the [first] Gulf War. They
took two lessons away from that war; that high-technology works,
and that the U.S. needs missile defenses. ... The Congress didn't
come away from watching the war with much interest in training
or personnel issues or ground forces in general."
What lessons lawmakers take from the war in Iraq remain to be
seen - but Carey believes that policymakers need a deeper understanding
of military issues that goes beyond defense budgets.
In particular, he is concerned about the post-war experiences
that thousands of military personnel will face when they come
home from Iraq - reservists who've lost their homes to bankruptcy
because of the pay cuts they've had to endure, or those who have
missed out on important advancement opportunities in their civilian
careers.
Carey said he conceived the idea for the National Defense PAC
in 2000 while he was "grousing" with a few buddies over
beers about the fact that so many people on Capitol Hill "who
had never slept in a foxhole half-filled with water" were
making decisions about soldiers' leaky boots.
Instead of just complaining, "we decided to go and do something
about it," Carey said.
In 2000, as 10 of the group's 11 endorsed candidates - including
now-Reps. Simmons, Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and Ed Schrock (R-Va.) -
won seats in Congress, Carey learned that the name National Defense
PAC really resonated with voters.
Endorsements, he explained, are the primary contribution that
the PAC makes to candidates. Actual financial contributions are
harder to come by - the group has raised about $30,000 for the
2004 election cycle and makes hard-dollar contributions to campaigns
sparingly, particularly if a candidate appears to have little
chance of winning.
"You never go into a battle you know up front you're going
to lose," Carey imparts.
In 2002, 56 of the PAC's 65 endorsed candidates - the group supported
incumbents and non-incumbents, Republicans and Democrats - were
successful.
This year, the group hopes to endorse 100 candidates. Among the
early recruits are California Republican Tim Escobar, who is seeking
a rematch with Rep. Linda Sanchez (D).
"He has served our country in America's armed forces, he
knows the hardships and dangers of military service first hand,
and he's committed to keeping the promises made to our veterans
when they first agreed to risk their lives to face America's enemies,"
a National Defense PAC news release put out last week said. "He's
already walked in their shoes and understands what it takes to
train and fight and win."
Escobar, who has served in the Army and Army Reserves since 1985,
has built much of his campaign platform around the premise that
he is, in his heart of hearts, a citizen soldier.
"That is why I will be working to improve funding for veterans'
health care, to ensure access to the VA health care system and
to provide fair and equitable coverage for military retirees and
disabled veterans," Escobar told voters in the 39th district
of California, home to 30,881 military veterans, when he announced
his bid for Congress.
In North Dakota, Republican Duane Sand is hoping he will garner
the National Defense PAC's support once again - he had the group's
backing during his unsuccessful Senate bid in 2000 - as he looks
to upset six-term incumbent Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D).
"I believe that veteran representation is at a historic
low at one of the worst times in the history of America,"
Sand explained in an interview. "America really needs new
breeds of Congressmen and Congresswomen - people from all over
the country better prepared and better equipped to decide on security
issues in the [face of] terrorism."
The 38-year-old former Navy submarine officer emphasized that
his military experience is something that "reaches across
party lines" and is critical in addressing the two key issues
facing the country - the economy and the war on terror - and critical
issues facing North Dakotans, including the potential closings
of military bases in Grand Forks and Minot.
It's a theme that resonates in his television advertisements
and on his campaign Web site and has helped him garner contributions
from other military veterans in 32 states.
One bio spot put together by Wilson-Grand Communications features
numerous shots of Sand in uniform at various points in his military
career.
"I'm Duane Sand. Service to country is in my blood. I felt
a strong commitment to my country very early in life and it's
never gone away," Sand narrates, while patriotic music plays
in the background and images of the American flag float across
the television screen.
"Admiral Carey - who I know through my 2000 race - is an
outstanding guy on a very important mission and it does mean a
lot to us," Sand says.
That said, getting an endorsement from the National Defense PAC
isn't a cakewalk.
Carey says his group first asks candidates to respond to a "yes"
or "no" set of "vetting questions" and then
reviews incumbents' voting records to make sure that their records
correspond with their answers.
After that, it's pretty much just "swag," Carey said.
Swag?
That's military jargon for "scientific wild ass guess,"
the admiral explains.
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