Republicans Make Last Ditch Effort To Stop DADT Repeal
he Pentagon has announced that “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” will be officially repealed on Tuesday, but Republicans are having a hard time accepting that the military won’t be allowed to discriminate against homosexuals anymore. This week two Republicans on the House Armed Services Committee asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to delay the repeal because Congress hasn’t seen a copy of the new rules yet.
Rep. Buck McKeon, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Rep. Joe “You Lie” Wilson, chairman of the committee’s personnel subcommittee, complained in a letter that although the government certified the repeal on July 22, this was “inaccurate” because it hasn’t provided detailed description of all the policy changes. They write:
“Committee officials have requested, but not received, copies of the revised regulations and a summary of all the specific policy changes, especially with regard to benefits, that will take effect upon repeal.
This failure to meet the committee’s requests leads us to conclude that decisions on the policies and regulations to implement repeal are not complete and that your certification and those of the others were inaccurate.”
They add that the repeal date must be postponed because the new regulations and policies need to undergo a “review and comment period” before they go into effect, and since they haven’t been asked to pick apart the new rules it’s “evident that the department does not have final, approved policies in place.”
Unsurprisingly, there’s no requirement that the new regulations be presented to the House, the representatives were just hoping that months after President Obama repealed the policy, they’d somehow be able to reopen debate.