Posted on 03/13/2004 1:51:11 PM PST by KriegerGeist
Some military voters may abandon Bush
President might be losing support among veterans, service members and their families
By WILLIAM DOUGLAS
Knight Ridder Newspapers
WASHINGTON When the Bush campaign asked James McKinnon to co-chair its veterans steering committee in New Hampshire a job he held in 2000 the 56-year-old Vietnam veteran respectfully, but firmly, said no.
I basically told them I was disappointed in his support of veterans, said McKinnon, who served two tours in Vietnam with the Coast Guard.
Hes killing the active-duty military. ... Look at the reserve call-ups for Iraq, the hardships. The National Guard the state militia is being used improperly. I took the president at his word on Iraq, and now you cant find a single report to back up or substantiate weapons of mass destruction.
President Bush is seeking re-election as a war president whose decisive leadership steered the military to victories in Afghanistan and Iraq. But as guerrilla warfare drags on in both countries, casualties mount and the Army is stretched ever thinner, many voters in or affiliated with the military are no longer saluting the commander in chief.
Factors threatening to erode Bushs once-strong support among military voters include:
The failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq
Lengthy deployments of active-duty soldiers and reservists
Proposed cuts in veterans benefits.
In the 2000 presidential election, absentee military ballots from overseas helped deliver the narrow margin of victory that sent Bush into the White House. So even a small defection of current and retired military people and their dependents could spell trouble for Bush in 2004.
I think President Bush has an electoral edge despite the fact that Senator (John) Kerry has a better military service record, said Loren Thompson, the chief operating officer of the Lexington Institute, a conservative Washington think tank.
That said, the prolonged tours of duty, the unexpected intensity (of the Iraq war) and the way reservists are being deployed are working against the president. There is a lot of resentment in the ranks about the level of commitment demanded of the reserves, particularly among the families.
A bipartisan poll of likely voters conducted in September found that Bushs approval rating among relatives of military personnel was only 36 percent. Family members upset by Bushs policy on Iraq are venting through Web sites and public protests.
Military Families Speak Out, an antiwar group of relatives of deployed troops, plans to observe the Iraq wars first anniversary next week with processions outside Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where the bodies of dead soldiers are returned, and at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, where wounded soldiers are treated.
Democrats sense an opportunity to chip away at whats been a mostly Republican base since the United States turned to an all-volunteer military in 1973. Kerry, the Democratic presidential candidate from Massachusetts and a decorated Vietnam veteran, touts his military record on the campaign trail.
Bush campaign officials say they expect military voters to return to the fold because the president has delivered on his 2000 campaign promise that help is on the way for underfunded, underpaid armed forces.
In his 2005 budget, Bush proposed 3.5 percent pay increases for armed service members, more than double the 1.5 percent increase for federal workers. Since Bush assumed office, the Pentagon has upgraded about 10 percent of its military housing and expects to modernize 76,000 more homes this year.
"I'm a lifelong Republican BUT...."
"I voted Republican all my life BUT...."
"I'm a military veteran and fought in 3 wars BUT..."
This article is as phony as the "peaceful tomorrow" commies who slammed Bush's 9/11 ads (paid for by Teresa Heinz).
Frankly, I can't see how a military man can vote for any Democrat Party Operative...
I would love the details on this bipartisan poll...
It wasn't written to sound good. You do know something called media bias don't you. You have only been registered here since November 2000
BTW, just one example of media bias. This article does not mention Kerry's anti-miltary activities when he came back from Vietnam, his association with anti-military Jane Fonda, or his anti-miltiary votes in Congress.
So, Business Week published this in December....but still no info on the specifics...
How much lower is the lamestream media going to sink?
That's the misleading part. A few ideas were kicked around Congress and the Pentagon, but none of it was enacted. However, a lot of press coverage was given to the discussion that went on, so much so that there are many people who actually believe such cuts happened.
This is only March. By September, we'll have news stories like "Dog with ESP tells owner to vote for Kerry... 'for the animals'."
Hint: THEY all don't sound good. Dude, you've been a member here for almost 4 years. FR should have educated you in Liberal Media Spin 101 by now.
I am a 24-year retired Coast Guard warrant officer who is 100 percent disabled," said James McKinnon, a former state commander of the New Hampshire VFW who has agreed to co-chair Clark's veteran outreach effort. "I've lost faith in the government and in this country. Why Clark? That's why."
This is so transparently obvious as a pre-emptive strike to mitigate the withering comments yet to come when our men and women in uniform are asked their opinion of John Kerry.
I have NEVER seen the press so desperate.
They're not even trying to hide their Democrat/Liberal leanings anymore.
There is just no shame left at all in the mainstream media.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.