State of the Union Address by President Donald J. Trump February 5th, 2019
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Sen. Murray vows to be ‘top advocate’ for

WASHINGTON — Sen. Patty Murray has always drawn a distinction between war and the men and women who fight it.

When
the Washington state Democrat was one of just 23 senators to vote
against launching the Iraq War in 2002, she said she’d support U.S.
troops “whenever their commander in chief sends them … not only during
the conflict but afterward.”

And as a 22-year-old intern in the
summer of 1972, Murray spent her days doing physical rehabilitation on
just-returned Vietnam veterans in the psychiatric ward of the Seattle
veterans’ hospital.


“Then I’d go out in the streets at night and hear the
protests,” said Murray, the daughter of a disabled World War II veteran
who earned a Purple Heart. “I knew what they were protesting, but the
imbalance of it all just really struck me.”

As the new chairman of
the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, Murray is making it clear that
she’s on the side of those who fight the wars.

“No matter what war
or what conflict, when they come home,” veterans will “have me to be
their top advocate in the United States of America,” said Murray, the
first woman to head the committee.

Murray said she wanted to speed
up claims processing and shorten the lines at VA centers. She wants to
end homelessness among veterans and help them find jobs. She said she’ll
be calling on businesses to hire more veterans. And she wants to make
sure that the federal government doesn’t overlook female veterans, a
growing population.

Veterans groups regard Murray, a 60-year-old fourth-term senator, as a particularly close friend on Capitol Hill.

Since
she joined the Veterans’ Affairs panel in 1995, most veterans groups —
including the Disabled American Veterans, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
of America and the Vietnam Veterans of America — have given her high
marks.

Most of them are pleased with her ascension, calling her a savvy, detail-oriented and courageous legislator.

“This is a tremendous fit,” said Paul Sullivan, the executive director of the Washington-based Veterans for Common Sense.

Sullivan
said that even though Murray wasn’t a veteran herself, she had “two
very special connections” with veterans: her father and her work
experience in Seattle. He said she’d been a leader on many issues:
female veterans, returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, and
psychological trauma and suicide among veterans.

“It’s absolutely
fantastic,” Sullivan said. “She has a personal connection — that’s
important — and she has subject matter expertise — that’s very
important, so there won’t be a learning curve.”

Murray, who
replaced Democratic Sen. Daniel Akaka of Hawaii as the committee’s
chairman, has plenty of fans in her home state, too.

“She’s
great,” said Beau Bergeron, of Steilacoom, Wash., a former head of the
Washington State Department of Veterans Affairs. “She’s absolutely
great. … She’s really difficult to — the non-PC term is — BS, because
she understands it. She asks very good questions. I’ve been in a number
of meetings where she has caused bureaucrat-sounding folks to get weak
in the knees and admit that they were not doing as good a job as they
needed to.”

Bergeron, who worked extensively with Murray, recalled
when the senator called the federal director of the Veterans Affairs
Department and “just flat took him to task” when funding was in jeopardy
for veterans’ facilities in Washington state.

“She’s an
advocate,” he said. “A lot of people say they are and show up at Fourth
of July parades or memorial services or wave a flag or whatever, but she
is not afraid to get dirty. And she is very sharp, knows a lot about
her subject and nobody outworks her.”

Rod Bluechel, the vice
president of the Columbia Basin Veterans Coalition in Washington state,
said that too much of the federal aid for veterans went to cities
instead of small communities. The coalition is trying to open a
seven-bed house for the homeless in Kennewick, Wash., but Bluechel said
the project was on hold because the group needed $12,000 from the
federal VA to install a sprinkler system.

Bluechel, a Vietnam
veteran, said Murray took heat for voting against the Iraq War at a time
when most politicians supported it, but that her opposition proved to
be “spot-on.”

“That’s why I kinda like her, because she kinda
stands for what she wants,” Bluechel said. “And I admire that in people.
… She stands in good shoes.”

When Murray voted against the war,
she called the action “an ill-defined solo mission” and said too many
questions about the conflict were unanswered.

“I understand the
consequences of war, and I don’t shrink from them,” she said. “My father
was among the first to land on Okinawa as a GI. Growing up, we always
knew that our country may need to project force to defend our freedoms.”

In an interview, Murray recalled her father, who had multiple sclerosis.

“He
never complained,” she said. “He was like so many World War II
veterans. He did service for his country. When he came back, he raised a
family, he did his job, he did so many things. That wasn’t how he
defined his life, but it certainly had a huge impact on his life. And I
think being his daughter and growing up, I realized that’s how so many
veterans are. … They don’t ask for anything.”

Murray, who was
first elected to the Senate in 1992 and now is its
fourth-highest-ranking Democrat, said she developed a passion for
serving veterans shortly after she arrived on Capitol Hill, when she was
approached by many veterans who complained of symptoms associated with
Gulf War syndrome.

“At the time, back in 1993, there was no name for it,” she said.

– McClatchy

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