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Senate Votes Thru Fillipino Vote That Nobody Wants|
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This Bill has been in the face of
Opposition from Veterans all over the country and yet it still gets pushed through. It is only and exclusively wanted by both Committee Chairmans, Bob Filner (Calif) at the House Veterans, and Daniel Akaka (Hawaii) at the Senate Veterans committees. _______________________________________ Start of Associated Press Release Apr 22, 4:49 PM EDT Senate proceeds on pension bill for Filipino veterans By LAURIE KELLMAN Associated Press Writer Senate proceeds on pension bill for Filipino veterans WASHINGTON (AP) -- Legislation to provide millions of dollars in new pension benefits to Filipino veterans of World War II cleared a key Senate hurdle Tuesday, but the White House and some Republicans said the money is better spent on U.S. soldiers fighting the war on terrorism. Despite the controversy, the Senate voted 94-0 to advance the bill to a final vote sometime this week. Democrats pushing the legislation want a 60-year-old law overturned to give 18,000 Filipino veterans of that war who live abroad a roughly $300-a-month pension. The White House and Republican opponents of the bill point out that such a pension would be added to one already afforded these veterans by their own government. No lawmaker wants to be accused of opposing federal aid to veterans, especially in an election year. Senators on both sides bandied that accusation and sparred over which veterans are most deserving of U.S. aid at this time in history. Democrats said the aid is long overdue to these Filipino veterans who fought alongside Americans during World War II. "We depended on the Filipinos as they fought bravely and valiantly by our side," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. "America needs allies. We need to set an example that we stick by our friends." Republicans countered that U.S. veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan deserve first dibs at pension money and that paying non-citizen veterans a pension in wartime is a misplaced priority. "There was never a promise made" to the Filipino veterans living abroad, said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., the top Republican on the Veterans Affairs committee. "I believe it is time for us to stand up for our guys, versus that select group." The White House statement did not include a veto threat, but named several concerns the administration has with the bill. Chief among them is that the bill would give the Filipino veterans an annual pension higher than the average annual income in that country. The average American veteran pensioner living in the U.S., meanwhile, receives payouts of less than one-third of the average U.S. family income, the administration said. "These Filipino veterans would have a relative benefit much greater than the average veteran pensioner living in the United States," the statement said. _______________________________________ End of AP Release Sue Frasier, VEV 1970 Army Signal Corps national activist/protester staff Blogger, VFJ |
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House & Senate Veterans Affairs Comte's
Senate Votes Thru Fillipino Vote That Nobody Wants
