VoteVets and Trump

logo It is not surprising that left-leaning organization VoteVets is finding ways to criticize President Trump, such as their using the image from Twitter showing Trump has blocked their account. I’m interested specifically in the traction they will get when firing up the Robert Mueller vs. Trump contrast by invoking Mueller’s service in the US Marine Corps after he finished at NYU.

Trump’s educational and medical draft deferments during the Vietnam War did not reverberate as an issue as recent presidential and vice-presidential candidates’ problems with service-related questions had (e.g. Clinton, Quayle, Bush 43).

Transgender veteran contesting NC-02

It’s always risky to look ahead this far out for 2018, but the Carolina second district, where the Republican incumbent George Holding has a not-quite-competitive district (which is considered an opportunity for Democrats for North Carolina),  at GOP +7. Hoping to win the bid to unseat him is Wendy Ella May, a transgender candidate who has made VA issues one of her key campaign themes. What does the crystal ball suggest? May is not the first transgender veteran to run of course. Last cycle Kristin Beck, the author of Princess Warrior, a transgender former Navy Seal, attempted to defeat longtime incumbent Steny Hoyer in MD-5 in the primaries. She made headlines, but the context of the race with Hoyer’s powerful incumbency means we should not use the race as a barometer for the political viability of transgender veterans–Democratic groups that might support a candidate like Beck are not likely to endorse against the Democratic Whip no matter who else is on the ballot.

When the news knows little

The media coverage of this morning’s shooting repeated an unhealthy but seemingly unavoidable pattern: breathless descriptions of mobile phone video, police tape, and repetition of scant facts. I was reminded of a thoughtful conversation on On The Media with Indira Lakshmanan regarding how the media can do a better job. She discussed how ISIS profited from the way the TV journalism especially covered the Manchester bombing. Her prescriptions are not precisely relevant for the lone gunman style terrorism seen today, but worth repeating.

Veteran issues make bipartisanship easier

veterans_administration_31084With hyperpartisanship the new norm on Capitol Hill before Donald Trump became president, finding issues on which Republicans and Democrats can agree is difficult. Today, away the drama and sparks flying in the Senate Intelligence Committee with Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Congress passed (with 368 yeas in the House) the “Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act,” tightening up rules that will make it easier to terminate the small number of “bad apples,” to use sponsor’s Jon Testor’s words, working in the VA. Voting against veterans is a tough vote in the legislature, as veterans’ issues are one of those small number of valence topics in American politics–issues on which there is large consensus. This particular bill scratched just the right combination of itches: firing bad bureaucrats helps some on the right, while strengthening the VA is something most legislators can consider a win. Bereft of legislative victories elsewhere on his agenda, President Trump is almost certainly going to sign this bill soon. (NPR story)

Navy vet hopes to challenge Frelinghuysen

ms-01While we have some time before the primaries that will decide it, Navy veteran Mikie Sherrill hopes to be the Democratic nominee in the New Jersey eleventh district. The long time incumbent (remembering that his family name holds even longer incumbency) has made some unforced errors recently that may have opened the door to higher quality challengers and greater out-of-district fundraising. Frelinghuysen’s 11th district was very closely balanced between Clinton and Trump in last year’s general election, so we’re keeping an eye on this race. (NJ.com post)