In response to the upcoming vote on a constitutional amendment to ban [tag]flag burning[/tag], Harry Reid’s office has a pretty good response: this is a ridiculous waste of time. “It’s that time of the year to throw a little red meat to the base,” said Jim Manley, spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.). “We need to focus on the American people’s priorities.”
Bill Frist’s office agrees, which is why he’s scheduled a vote on the amendment for June.
Frist spokesman Bob Stevenson said that is exactly what his boss is doing. The flag-protection amendment “is the number-one issue on veterans’ agenda,” Stevenson said yesterday.
The response got me thinking: Is this even remotely true? Do veterans’ groups consider the flag amendment their “number-one issue”? Is it even in their top 10?
I checked the website for the Veterans of Foreign Wars ([tag]VFW[/tag]), one of the nation’s largest veterans’ groups. The site includes a copy of the testimony VFW Commander in Chief James Mueller presented to the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs earlier this month. Mueller’s testimony spanned nearly 6,000 words — not one of which mentioned the flag, even in passing.
Better yet, the VFW also published its “Legislative Priority Goals” for 2005 and 2006. It’s a detailed, 10-point legislative agenda that emphasizes health care, veterans’ benefits, the GI Bill, retirement pay, job training, and community-based homeless programs. There were no references to the flag or the amendment.
It’s not only proof that Frist’s office needs another spin for this nonsense, it’s also a point to keep in mind when the June debate rolls around.