Pentagon defends voting assistance efforts
Soldiers filling out voter absentee ballots at Camp Phoenix in Kabul, Afghanistan.
U.S. Army
A Pentagon official charged with assisting Americans serving abroad to vote told lawmakers her office is operating more effectively than ever, although a recent Defense Department inspector general report still pointed to program shortcomings.
Pamela Mitchell, acting director of Defense’s Federal Voting Assistance Program, told the House Armed Forces Committee’s Military Personnel’s Subcommittee on Thursday that Americans overseas lauded the progress her office has made.
“We provide voting assistance every day, and we’ve never done it better,” Mitchell said. “Voters seeking assistance will find myriad resources available, including a professional call center, well-trained voting assistance officers and an information-rich Web portal.”
Kenneth Moorefield, a Defense Department deputy inspector general who also testified Thursday to present the findings of his office’s report, painted a different picture.
Moorefield pointed to a failure to follow through on requirements spelled out in the 2009 Military and Voters Overseas Act -- known as the MOVE Act -- which called for voting assistance offices on every U.S. military base not in a war zone. He said half the time his office tried to contact those offices they were unable to find any proof the offices had been established.
“We believe the number of [voting assistance offices] necessary to comply with the spirit of the law may significantly exceed the number of [offices] actually in existence today,” he told the panel. Moorefield added some of the information on the website, which Mitchell had praised, was “inaccurate.”
Mitchell acknowledged the current system remains imperfect, but emphasized military members have access to previously unseen resources.
“I spent over 25 years in uniform, and I wish I’d had access to the tools that are out there today,” Mitchell said. “However, even if only one absentee service member or overseas citizen has a problem, we believe it is one too many, and there is no question that we still have work to do.”
By using this service you agree not to post material that is obscene, harassing, defamatory, or otherwise objectionable. Although GovExec.com does not monitor comments posted to this site (and has no obligation to), it reserves the right to delete, edit, or move any material that it deems to be in violation of this rule.
The Vast Majority of IRS Employees Aren't Corrupt
GSA Mishandled Executive Bonuses
EIG 2013 as Told by Your Tweets
Infographic: Nominee Limbo
Will You Be Furloughed?
Boldly Go Where No Fed's Gone Before
Sponsored
3 Ways Data is Improving DoD Performance
Need to Know Memo: Big Data
Cutting costs: Inside the effort to improve the efficiency of federal operations
Addressing the 3 Biggest BYOD Security Threats
