WRVO — Senator Kirsten Gillibrand proposes new military sexual assault bill

US Senator Kirsten Gillibrand addresses a crowd in WRVO NPR stations feature photo accompanying LCB founder Matt Laslo's feature

New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand takes questions from local press corps.

By Matt Laslo

New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand is on a personal crusade to change the military culture that’s allowed sexual assaults to go unpunished, and is attempting to push a bill through the Senate.

Gillibrand remembers when the issue of sexual assaults in the military really got on her radar. It was while watching a 2012 documentary called The Invisible War.

“[It] tells the stories of men and women who survive these brutal rapes, and then had to survive having their command turn their back on them," Gillibrand said. "It was the second victimization that really crushed their spirits and crushed their souls. And my fury watching these stories unfold was so strong I just said, ‘I just had to do something about it.’”

Shortly after, Gillibrand was named chairwoman of the Armed Services subcommittee on personnel. Her proposal removes sexual crimes from the military chain of command.

“If you don’t address the number one concern that there’s a breach of trust with chain of command, you’re not really going to fix the system,” Gillibrand explained.

The Pentagon released a private survey last year on sexual assault in the military. About 26,000 soldiers reported being sexually assaulted. The other problem: of those, only about 3,300 officially reported the abuse. Gillibrand has slowly and methodically been picking up support for her measure by lobbying many lawmakers one by one. Her legislation now has 53 cosponsors.

Connecticut Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal says Gillibrand has been relentless in her effort.

“Extraordinarily impressive. Both thorough and tireless on behalf of a cause that clearly has interested and excited her,” Blumenthal said.

But Gillibrand is facing fierce opposition from both military brass and a few lawmakers, some from her own party. Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill opposes Gillibrand’s bill. As a former prosecutor, McCaskill says she’s willing to compare her resume on this issue to anyone’s.

“I don’t think there’s anybody in the Senate that’s prosecuted more rapists than I have," McCaskill said. "I don’t think there’s anybody in the Senate who’s spent more time with victims than I have in my life.”

McCaskill and other lawmakers are planning to filibuster Gillibrand’s bill when it comes to the Senate floor. She says reforms included in a recent Defense Authorization bill should fix the problem. They include stripping commanders of the ability to overturn convictions and providing counseling to victims.

McCaskill is also hoping to strengthen those reforms.

"There will be more prosecutions and better protection for victims with the reforms that we have just signed into law and I think all of us are going to be paying very close attention to how those reforms are actually implemented by the military, making sure they do it in a way that respects victims and gives victims power,” McCaskill said.

New Hampshire Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte is teaming up with McCaskill to defeat Gillibrand’s bill but she says there’s no lingering bad blood.

“I appreciate what Senator Gillibrand's been doing and we’ve worked together on all the reforms that we’ve already passed, so I don’t think this one area of disagreement should misunderstand all of our commitment to ensuring that people are held accountable within the military,” Ayotte said.

Still, Gillibrand isn’t letting up. She says military leaders have failed to address the root problem for decades.

“Small adjustments, incremental measures will not make the difference and our troops deserve better,” Gillibrand said.

Gillibrand has been promised a vote on her proposal by Democratic leaders. She expects it to come up in the next four to six weeks, though it could happen any day.

Getting it to the floor will be a small victory for New York’s junior senator, but she says she’s not letting up until the problem has been rooted out.

LISTEN to LCB founder Matt Laslo’s feature at www.WRVO.org

Matt Laslo

Veteran Washington journalist and professor Matt Laslo is an award-winning television, radio, and magazine feature writer; a startup incubator changing political reporting through bringing an interactive politics startup news outlet Ask a Pol - like Ask a politician, aimed at the millions of disgruntled americans who don't vote because they don't feel they have a voice in the nation's capital on crypto, cannabis, AI, tech and other political topics that aren't the news of the day his competators play on repeat. Laslo's unique and a force on Capitol Hill. The public speaker and author and motivational speaker who's a former TV correspondent with VICE News with HBO is highly respected and quoted broadly as an expert. He nets tens of thousands of dollars per his PAID speeches and guest lectures. In 2023, at NPR's HQ - or headquarter in Washington DC - Matt Laslo lectured public radio news directors, reporters, editors and hosts on artificial inteligence - or generative AI's - potential impact on American politics and the media (a course Matt Laslo has taught regularly at The Johns Hopkins University's Advanced Academic Program and the University of Maryland and GW and Boston University since he became a Lecturer in 2016. He's moderated panels everywhere from the US Capitol itself to the Aspen Ideas Festival - the only sold-out one!!!! cause he's energetic, smart, witty, funny and fun. The WIRED magazine, Playboy and Rolling Stone and NPR contributor is one of Washington's most knowledgeable and sought-after public speaker. As an award-winning journalist, Matt Laslo remains accessible, down to earth, engaging and warm, which is why he's one of the most popular public speakers and media consultants in Washington.

https://mattlaslo.com
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