Investors.com
Obama
To Soldiers Overseas: No
Voting For You!
Military:
The administration thanks
the troops for their service by failing to comply with a law requiring
that it
help soldiers deployed overseas cast ballots in their home states.
The
administration has taken
various states to court to block voter ID laws on the grounds it will
disenfranchise voters. But it has no qualms about the
disenfranchisement of
military voters overseas through its failure to comply with and enforce
the
Military and Overseas Voter Empowerment (MOVE) Act, passed by Congress
in 2009
and signed into law by President Barack Obama.
The
law acknowledges the
difficulties caused by time and distance for deployed soldiers in
exercising
the right to vote they put their lives on the line to protect. One of
the key
provisions required each military branch to create an installation
voting
assistance office (IVAO) for every military base outside an immediate
combat
zone.
Last
week, however, the Pentagon's
inspector general reported that attempts to locate and contact IVAO
offices at
overseas military installations failed about half the time.
"Results
were clear. Our
attempts to contact IVAOs failed about 50% of the time," the inspector
general reported. "We concluded the Services had not established all
the
IVAOs as intended by the MOVE Act because, among other issues, the
funding was
not available."
The
estimated cost of establishing
functioning IVAOs at all overseas military bases not in combat zones is
estimated at between $15 million and $20 million a year. We wasted $530
million
on Solyndra but can't afford a relative pittance to ensure our soldiers
are not
disenfranchised.
An
administration that constantly
talks about voter disenfranchisement appears unconcerned that a study
by the
nonpartisan Military Voters Protection Project found that in 2008 less
than 20%
of 2.5 million military voters successfully voted by absentee ballot.
In 2010,
that participation shrank to a scandalous 5%. We need to encourage
military
voting and make it easier.
Is
there a method in the
administration's madness, a reason it doesn't want to make it easier
for
soldiers to vote? It couldn't possibly have anything to do with the
fact that
John McCain won 54% of the military vote in 2008 or that a May 2012
Gallup poll
showed Mitt Romney pulling 58% to President Obama's paltry 34%.
The
law also requires that states
mail absentee ballots to their servicemen 45 days before an election so
there's
enough time to return and count them. The Department of Justice can
file suit
to ensure compliance but in 2010 was content to grant failing states
waivers.
As a result, about one-third of overseas troops who wanted to vote in
2010
couldn't, according to testimony at a House committee hearing in
February.
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