Sinema At White House For Signing Of Her Legion Act

trump sinema
President Donald J. Trump signs S. 504, the Let Everyone Get Involved in Opportunities for National Service (LEGION) Act Tuesday, July 30, 2019, in the Oval Office of the White House. [Official White House Photo by Tia Dufour]

WASHINGTON – Arizona Senator Kyrsten Sinema attended the White House’s bill signing ceremony of her LEGION Act, which extends American Legion membership to honorably discharged veterans since World War II. The LEGION Act is Sinema’s second Senate bill signed into law by President Trump.

Currently, only veterans who served during periods of declared hostilities are able to join the Legion.

Sinema’s bipartisan LEGION Act was cosponsored by Republican Senator Thom Tillis (N.C.).

“The LEGION Act’s success shows when we work across the aisle, we can deliver for everyday Americans—including improving services for veterans across Arizona,” said Sinema, a member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

“Recognizing the service of these wartime veterans is the right thing do and it is long overdue,” National Commander Brett P. Reistad said. “The families of those who were killed or wounded during these wartime acts should take pride in knowing that we recognize their sacrifice and service. Moreover, we are proud to welcome any of the six million living veterans from the previously unrecognized periods into our organization and call them ‘Legionnaires.’”

Sinema has led multiple successful efforts to strengthen services and protections for Arizona veterans. The LEGION Act is her second veterans bill to pass both chambers of Congress and head to the be signed into law. Recently, her bipartisan Protecting Affordable Mortgages for Veterans Act, which safeguards veterans from predatory loan practices and helps them more easily access their earned homeowner benefits, was signed into law.

While in the U.S. House, Sinema cosponsored the VA MISSION Act, which is now law. The VA MISSION Act helps veterans receive care when they don’t live near a VA facility or when the VA can’t provide them with timely or specialty medical care. Sinema has also led the charge to reform the VA by being an original cosponsor of the VA Accountability Act and by supporting the VA Choice Act, both of which were signed into law. Additionally, Sinema worked with the family of Sgt. Daniel Somers, an Arizona veteran who lost his life to suicide, to introduce and successfully get signed into law the Sgt. Daniel Somers Classified Veterans Access to Care Act which ensures veterans who serve in a classified capacity can get private counseling from the VA.

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