There's a short video on this one that has a little blurb about half way through that just knocked me right off of my limb..
Lets see if it was just me or if somebody else catches it too..
http://www.kxxv.com/story/19699371/military-voting-issues-continue-to-mount ABC affiliate somewhere around Waco.
Military voting issues continue to mountPosted: Oct 01, 2012 11:09 PM CDT
By: Chris Cheng
A new report shows military ballot requests have fallen drastically in key battle ground states.
The Military Voter Protection Project (MVPP) said it saw a 92% drop in absentee-ballot requests by service members in the state of Virginia; compared to 2008.
Other swing states including Florida, North Carolina, Illinois, Ohio, Alaska, and Nevada have also seen a decline of more than 50% in requests.
Senator John Cornyn has been outraged by the mounting issues tied to soldiers voting this November.
"DoD leaders must answer for this serious failure and do everything in their power to make this right for military voters and their family members," Senator Cornyn said.
Absentee ballot voting is crucial for soldiers, many of whom are stationed overseas or assigned to an installation that is not their home state.
MVPP estimates that two-thirds of military men and women will have to vote through absentee ballots but the research shows many are not requesting them.
The MVPP report comes on the heels of a report issued by the Pentagon's Inspector General indicating deficient on-base voter assistance for military service members and their families, mandated by the 2009 law, the Military and Overseas Voter Empowerment Act, or MOVE Act.
"This is an unacceptable failure by Pentagon leaders to comply with the law and ensure our service members and their families are able to exercise one of the most fundamental rights for which they sacrifice every day,"
Senator Cornyn said.
The MOVE Act was passed by Congress and President Barack Obama, back in 2009, to ensure service members and their families stationed overseas had the access to vote.
To make matters worse, the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin E. Dempsey told reporters that the military prefers a politically neutral stance when it comes to voting.Senator Cornyn and others in the Senate were upset with the general's comments because they believed it may discourage soldiers from voting.
"Today we're learning our men and women in uniform may be even more disenfranchised than they were before sweeping reforms were signed into law two years ago to make it easier for them to exercise their right to vote," Senator Cornyn said.