McCain’s bizarre reluctance on the new GI Bill

You’ve got to be kidding me.

On ABC’s The View this morning, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) was asked about the great strain placed on U.S. troops due to the Iraq war. McCain recognized the strain and said that in order to motivate Americans to join the military, the government should provide stronger “educational benefits”: “[O]ne of the things we ought to do is provide them significant educational benefits in return for serving.”

Why, that’s a great idea. Why hasn’t someone thought of that before?

Oh wait, someone did — and for reasons that defy comprehension, McCain refuses to support the legislation.

To briefly recap for those just joining us, the GI Bill was instrumental in helping send a generation of U.S. veterans to college and helping create the nation’s post-WWII middle class, but the law has not kept up with the times. Whereas veterans used to be able to count on the government to pay for all of their college expenses, troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are finding that the GI Bill barely scratches the surface of today’s college costs.

Sens. Jim Webb (D-Va.) and Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) unveiled a GI Bill modernization bill over a year ago, which would increase troop benefits to pay for their education. From a patriotic perspective, this is showing real support for the troops. From a military perspective, it might make recruiting easier if young people know they can go to college after their service for free. From an economic perspective, the country benefits when thousands of educated young people enter the workforce with degrees, as opposed to the alternative.

Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are busy on the campaign trail, but both have signed on as co-sponsors of the Webb/Hagel bill. McCain, on the other hand, has stayed on the sidelines.

Why, then, is McCain going on national television to talk about how much he supports providing veterans with educational benefits?

Ret. Gen. Wesley Clark and Jon Soltz, an Iraq war veteran and chairman of VoteVets.org, explained the need for McCain to step up in an op-ed this morning.

The Post-9/11 Veterans Act, which has an estimated cost between $2.5 billion and $4 billion, is common-sense legislation. With 51 cosponsors, including nine Republicans, the three other Vietnam War veterans in the Senate and former Secretary of the Navy John Warner, the bill simply updates what the late historian Stephen Ambrose called “the best piece of legislation ever passed by the U.S. Congress.” Yet, faced with unprecedented filibusters, it needs 60 cosponsors. As de facto leader of the party, McCain could signal to other Republicans to sign on to the bill and assure passage.

Instead, McCain has said he hasn’t had time to read the bill and isn’t sure if he could support it. It’s hard to believe that neither he nor anyone on his staff has had time to read such an important bill, which has been around since before he started running for president. But, even if true, McCain must do the right thing now, when his leadership is needed.

What possible reason could there be to oppose education benefits for veterans? Why would McCain hesitate? Why does the White House actually oppose the Webb/Hagel bill? Kevin explains:

They’re afraid that updating GI benefits will hurt retention rates as soldiers leave the service to go to college. Charming, no? And of course, it would cost too much. Can’t have that when it comes to programs that involve actual help for actual people. Apparently we’re better off spending money on sugar subsidies and mediating gang wars in Iraq than we are helping vets get an education. Where’s Mr. Straight Talk when you need him?

Nowhere to be found.

As I understand it right now, to qualify at the end of your enlistment for the current educational benefits you have to give the Government $1000 at the start of your enlistment.

Is there any more disgusting a ploy by this Government to avoid supporting our veterans?

Oh yah, you have to apply to the VA for your benefits rather then get automatically enlisted by the DoD if you honorably finish your service.

And the Military thinks that Republican’ts support them 😎

  • Where’s Mr. Straight Talk when you need him?

    Probably throwing another BBQ for his media buddies.

  • I think we detect a patriotism deficit here. John, if ya’ got time to host a barbecue, ya’ got time to read the GI bill. Period.

  • Don’t you understand? McCain gets a pass on this issue too because of all his military cred.

  • It sounds like there’s something more going on here, something like what Mark Schmitt described with McCain and campaign finance reform, which you touched on yesterday or the day before. It seems like if McCain didn’t think of something and isn’t getting the credit, he just doesn’t sem interested. He seems to be really egotistic.

  • My theory is that McCain is hoping the issue goes away and that the bill dies, but that if supporters can get 59 senators together, he will become the 60th with great fanfare.

  • Why, then, is McCain going on national television to talk about how much he supports providing veterans with educational benefits?

    Um, because he can? Because no one will call him on it or confront him with his hypocrisy?

    sasq.

  • His increasing senility is removing any kind of rationality he ever had. Soon there won’t be anything left but his temper, his foul mouth, and talk about a 100 year war.

  • I think mimikats is half-right. It’s not necessarily that McCain intro’s the bill; he’s now a partisan animal, and any bill not intro’d by ALL Republicans must be defeated, no matter how much good it might actually do. Dems can’t have any victories, least of all rising star Webb. Nip his ascension in the bud by any means necessary. Despicable.

  • Signing onto a bill primarily sponsored by Democrats who are well known isn’t the type of bipartisanship McCain is after. He needs something he can appear to be in the lead on that burnishes the old Maverick persona.

  • Unless there is a clear-cut negative aspect to the bill that has not been vetted, there is no reason not to support this bill. I hope he gets his [redacted] kicked over this.

  • Why, then, is McCain going on national television to talk about how much he supports providing veterans with educational benefits?

    He’s a Republican and everyone knows that Republicans think voters are morons who believe words more than actions? He will keep on saying he supports it and curse you to your face if you point out inconvenient facts that interfere with the propaganda.

  • Kevin Drum: “And of course, it would cost too much.”

    Too much compared to what? Someone needs to ask McCain or Bush how we can afford to pay so many mercenaries many times what our soldiers make but can’t afford to give our soldiers educational benefits that would cost a tiny fraction of our mercenary budget. God this war is fucked up in so many ways.

  • When I was in the Navy you had to enroll at bootcamp. They take $100 a month for 12 months directly out of your pay.

    The benefit is $400 for 36 months. You could take the continuous 36 months or 9 months for 4 years. It’s adjusted for inflation and I actually got about $450.

    I forget what it is called but when you are released you have to designate a state. I choose my home state of Wisconsin, which was really smart because they paid for every dollar of tuition because I was Veteran of Desert Storm.

    So if there are any Veterans out there, choose a state that pays for tuition as your release state. I know for sure that Texas and Wisconsin will pay all of your tuition, including post graduate tuition, and most states will not make Veterans pay out-of-state tuition.

    It has been my experience that once you are out, they really look out for you. The Vet office in Milwaukee was always calling and asking how school was going and if I needed anything. They had a good reputation in the community and people were constantly donating. Maybe I was lucky, but now that I am in Houston, I feel like a burden when I go to their office even though I am the one asking if they need anything. There is a feeling that is hard to describe when strangers appreciate you and show it just because of what I always felt was no big deal. I suspect Houston is overwhelmed with Veterans and underwhelmed with help.

    My point, is you have the chance to just say thanks to a Vet do it and if can donate, again do it, these guys deserve (way more then I ever did) to feel appreciated.

  • We don’t need a new bill to change the money bennifits. Soldier enlists, gets $30,000 enlistment bonus, then gets free training. Serves just three years, yes that’s one deployment to Iraq (pocket $30,000 tax free which I could bank tax free and allow to grow making me a multi-millionaire at age 65, and never having to save another penny of my paycheck the rest of my life). They get $13,500 in free tuition assistance to go to college on in those three years (that is 54 college credits). They can take all the College Level Examination Program tests for free (30+ college credits if you have half a brain and some highschool education). Their military training is translated into college credit for free (10+ college credits for free). They invest just $1,800 in the GI Bill investment program (initial investment and buy-up program), and they get back $40,000 to go to college during or after seperation. Now last time I checked that would pay for Law School in Idaho.

    I wish I had enlisted at age 18. I’d be 21, have 96 college credits, have $50,000 in cash in my pocket (assuming I don’t blow it on a fancy car), and a $1,800 investment that had a instant $40,000 return. Not to mention, I’m now eligable for about a million other college scholarships. Yeah McCain is an idiot. This is nothing but pandering to voters. I think that is more than adequate compensation for three years of military service.

    The only thing a new GI Bill needs is that Soldiers don’t pay out of state tuition at any college in the USA, and if soldiers serve over 10 years they can use their GI Bill for their children.

  • Senator McCain has an opportunity to get back into the game by becoming the leader of this initiative if he chooses to improve it by adopting a few commonsense additions: no tuition at just any College but selected high quality peer reviewed (top 20%) institutions; a minimum 40% of offerings to those in technology/maths/science/engineering/medicine (not law or social sciences); and a guarantee that if you serve in the public sector or a ngo posting for the first five years post graduation in the worse (toughest) postcodes (say bottom 20% demographically in urban and bottom 40% in rural communities) you get a 50% increase in fee support. Leadership takes risks.

  • Whiny Brice sez: “…they get back $40,000 to go to college during or after seperation. Now last time I checked that would pay for Law School in Idaho.”

    Note to WB: Googling is easy, and can help you not to look like a total idiot.

    Since 1985, average law school tuition has more than tripled. A year of tuition at a public law school is now over $20,000 a year, and average tuition at private law schools is around $30,000 a year.

    Or you could just try to stifle the temptation to spout off in a high dudgeon when you haven’t a clue what you you’re talking about.

  • Republicans have traditionally supported the military-industrial complex. Not the soldier.
    Support our troops means don’t question our idiotic pre-emptive war based on cooked intelligence.
    President (General) Eisenhower was correct in his farewell presidential speech when he warned to be wary of the military-industrial complex. We should be more vigilant now than ever since the precedent has been established by cheney/bush that pre-emptive wars are an American right. Why aren’t the democrats hot on this issue? No bid Iraq contracts to cheney’s Halliburton with little oversight?
    Don’t expect to see the draft anytime soon either. The repubs like the military staffed with foreigners who are promised citizenship for their mercenary activities.
    Of course you will not see this reported in the main-stream media or on fox news.
    The draft would fill the military with questioning soldiers and the defense establishment does not want that as they fight their oil wars.
    Tell your representatives to make vigilance of the military-industrial complex a priority.

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