Tag Archives: Veterans
Unanimous Consent Speech – June 26, 2025
Thank you Mr. Speaker.
I was going to save this for veto day, to be closer to the anniversary, but world events this past week motivated me to rise today.
On October 19, 2005, 6.5miles from the Syrian border along the Euphrates, 3rd Bn 6th Marines, Kilo Company, 1st Platoon, 3rd Squad was on a foot patrol along ASR Diamond in the Al’Qaim Region of the Al’Anbar province in Iraq. Random patrols through the community were meant to keep insurgents at bay, discourage the planting of IEDs and weapons caches, and build rapport with the community so they’d be more inclined to report suspicious activities in the area. On that day, there were warning signs, the children were acting strange, they didn’t follow the patrol asking for MREs or money like most days, the shops were closed. The patrol still went on, and heads were on a swivel. But readiness and vigilance can only do so much. Blind alleys between cinderblock walls are commonplace in Iraq.
I know this, because I was on that patrol. I saw the car leap out from the alley feet from Anderson. I heard the order from Thornton to “shoot that M-Fer”. I saw Anderson fire a precision shot through the windshield into the driver’s head. I witnessed the vehicle vaporize from within into a violent explosion. I don’t remember the sound, though. I remember picking myself up from the dirt after being knocked on my ass, miraculously uninjured. I remember running up the column to a roadside ditch to roll Sanford face-up. I remember he came to, thankfully alive. I remember repeatedly watching nearby rooftops for secondary attackers as was common throughout the war. I remember seeing Thornton realize he had a hole in his leg and he sat back down to tourniquet his own wound, still giving us orders to set up a perimeter. I remember Melo screaming, he was 2nd man in the column, and caught a bunch of shrapnel in his gut. And, hauntingly, I remember Hubbard exclaiming from up the road “Wally’s f-ing wasted, man!” Hubbard also had a wounded leg his adrenaline didn’t allow him to feel. Wally was the nickname of Lance Corporal Norman Anderson III, our point man, killed in action.
Later, it was determined by the EOD team in the Battalion QRF that the SVBIED’s hood release was wired as a deadman switch. Wally’s lightning fast acquisition of the target, and single shot saved the lives of every other member of the squad, myself included. Some of us have scars, both physical and psychological, but we are alive today because of the bravery and skill of that one man.
I’ve dedicated that life to speaking out against warmongering, advocating for tempered approaches, and skepticism towards the claims made by our intelligence agencies and the Pentagon. I ask you to join me in skepticism towards reports of “weapons of mass destruction,” claims that “we will be welcomed as liberators,” “mission accomplished,” assertions that there were long-term plans for Afghanistan and Iraq, or the blatant lies like “we will not put boots on the ground in Syria.” I push for skepticism against the intelligence community because their mistakes (giving extreme benefit of the doubt that they were JUST mistakes), cost the lives of the men and women whose patriotism drove them to join our all-volunteer military. We should not recklessly take advantage of that patriotism, we should not send them into harm’s way unless absolutely necessary to protect the lives of American citizens here at home.
I did not enlist after 9/11 to enact regime change in Iraq and I’d venture a guess it’d be rare to find soldiers, sailors, airmen, or marines that told their recruiters their explicit reason for signing up in the last few years was to march on Tehran. So when people chest-thump on Facebook and Twitter, and have whataboutism arguments about previous presidents’ actions over the last several decades of CONSTANT war through ALL of the administrations, remember the 2002 AUMF for Iraq passed bipartisanly 296 to 133 due to political pressure from the people. Remember how certain the intelligence community was about the manufacture of weapons of mass destruction. Remember the lies about Saddam being in league with bin Laden. Remember how most of the pundits and talking heads that pushed for the Iraq war, cheered it on, have since recanted. Remember that we never even passed an AUMF for Syria despite putting boots on the ground, and Al’Qaida is currently killing Alawites and Christians each day since we assisted them in taking the country from the Assad regime. Remember Iran is bigger than Iraq and Afghanistan combined in both land area and population, with the worst features of both.
I ask that you remember this unanimous consent when I rise before you all again in January. I ask that you remember the sacrifices of the men and women that continue to volunteer to wear the uniform. I ask you to pray, and speak loudly for peace, and to bring our troops home from places they shouldn’t be, and out of harm’s way. And finally, I ask you to remember Lance Corporal Norman “Wally” Anderson III, the man that saved the lives of his squadmates 20 years ago. Thank you.
Panel – Defend the Guard At Liberty Forum
Interview – Now is the Time to Talk
I joined Jesse Gillis for a discussion about my service in the Marine Corps, my opinions on US foreign policy, and to discuss HB104 Defend the Guard.
Appointment – State Veterans Advisory Committee
I want to thank Speaker Packard for appointing me as one of the two House members on the State Veterans Advisory Committee. I have been going to their monthly meetings for over a year, now, and am impressed with its function as an information conduit between veterans and the various state agencies, as well as the NH Federal delegation in DC. I will continue to be present at the monthly meetings through this term and be available to the members.
Interview – Shut the Punk Up
I appeared on Shut the Punk Up podcast, hosted by my friend Ben Weir. We discussed Defend the Guard, U.S. foreign policy, our military service, my motivations for moving to New Hampshire and running for office, music, and how others can get involved politically to continue making New Hampshire the freest state in the nation.
I have refiled for State Rep!
On Wednesday, June 5, I refiled for State Representative for Hillsborough District 1, alongside Jeff Tenczar, Sandy Panek, and introducing my brother Tim Mannion.
I will continue the work in Concord of moving the state towards liberty, preserving the rights of Granite Staters, and keeping New Hampshire the #1 Freest State in the nation.
I will be refiling Defend the Guard, taking a crack at repealing the Selective Service Compliance Act, and working with other legislators to expand school choice, reduce taxes, protect the right to self-defense, and stand in the way of Federal overreach in whatever forms it will take into the next term!
I’m asking for your vote in the primary on September 10th and again in the general on November 5th!

Testimony – HB229 Defend the Guard (Senate Finance)
Thank you Mr. Chair, members of the committee. I’m Representative Tom Mannion, representing the town of Pelham. I’m also a United State Marine Corps Infantry Veteran, where I deployed with 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines to two combat deployments in Iraq. It was my experiences there that got me paying closer attention to politics, especially foreign policy, and put me on the path that brought me before you today.
My deployment in 2005 overlapped with Hurricane Katrina. A fellow squad mate, and eventual purple heart recipient, was from New Orleans. I couldn’t imagine what he was going through, knowing his family was trapped in rising flood waters, a world away and having to stay focused on patrol. What we didn’t learn until much later is how the war we were fighting contributed to the unnecessary loss of life back home.
During Katrina, 35% of Louisiana’s National Guard was in Iraq. Civil engineering equipment, supplies, and even helicopters from Louisiana and Mississippi Guard units were deployed to Iraq and Kuwait, and were unavailable for rescue operations. The call reached out to other states, whose Guard units were also deployed, prepping for deployment, or just returning from deployment to come aid. The DoD was forced to tap active duty Army and Marine Corps units to fill the gaps in the missing Guardsmen, but their slow deployments had fatal consequences. Former FEMA director Gen. Julius Becton Jr. said “If the 1st Cav. and 82nd Airborne had gotten there on time, I think we would have saved some lives.” But the reality is, the Louisiana Guard should have been available to their State in the first place.
That same missing Guard unit, the 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, was on the receiving end of rocket attacks in Syria in 2022. Which brings me Authorizations for Use of Military Force. They were implemented after the Vietnam war as part of the War Powers Act, and are the mechanism by which the United States has conducted combat operations across the globe ever since. The problem is, they lack the formality and the political consequences of a formal declaration war as defined by Art I Section 8 of the US Constitution. It has become a way for Congress to release itself from responsibility for these disastrous conflicts, while granting near limitless power to the Executive without a proper Constitutional amendment to do so.
In 2013, Congress abandoned the idea of issuing a new AUMF for Syria, as they knew how politically unpopular the forever wars in the Middle East have been. However, the Obama administration, and all those to follow, have cited the 2001 AUMF for GWOT and the 2002 AUMF for liberation and protection of Iraq as “good enough” legally to execute our war against ISIS and training of militants for regime change against Bashar al’Assad. Attempts to terminate these AUMFs have failed repeatedly, with Senator Rand Paul’s last bill only garnering 10 votes in the Senate. Asking the Federal Delegation is a failed proposition.
In more recent history, and as further spill-over from the endless Iraq and Syrian conflicts, the Tower 22 base in Jordan was attacked by Iraqi militia In January of this year, killing 3 soldiers and wounding more than 40 others. Among those were several Arizona National Guardsmen. It should come as no surprise then, that the Arizona Senate passed Defend the Guard, with every member of their Military Affairs and Public Safety Committee as a co-sponsor. They believe the guard would be better served securing their southern border instead of forward deployed in harms’ way for no benefit of the United States. I also heard through the Lance Corporal underground, as we used to call it, that our own Guardsmen had been deployed to that exact same base a few years back. When I asked the Deputy Adjutant General to confirm, he could not comment due to operational security reasons.
Finally, I want to address the other fatal consequences these deployments have. The suicide rates among post-9/11 veterans is horrifying, 4x higher than the casualties from combat itself. A lot of platitudes and useless talk is done by politicians in front of cameras, but no one wants to make the bold move necessary to destroy the root cause. The Pentagon is deploying our young men and women into combat zones with no objective, no clear targets, no victory condition, no end in sight. We lost thousands of lives in Iraq, only to pull out and have huge chunks of the country immediately fall to ISIS, requiring us to return and sit around at bases getting shot at, STILL with no exit strategy. We spent twenty years and thousands more lives transferring Afghanistan from the Taliban, back to the Taliban. These abysmal failures weigh on the minds of the men, like me, that watched their squad mates die, ultimately for nothing. We are no better off as a nation, no safer whatsoever from these sacrifices. And Congress will never change course until individuals like us, at the state level, force them to.
Please, as a combat veteran of these pointless conflicts, with invisible scars of my own, I ask that you vote OTP on HB229, and protect our State’s service members from the exploitation of DC. I’m happy to take any questions.
Documentary Screening – What I Want You to Know

I will be hosting a screening for the documentary “What I Want You to Know” on Thursday, December 21st at 6:30pm. This film is a series of interviews from Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, telling their stores about why they enlisted, what they experienced, and how their opinions about the wars shifted over the course of their service.
I was connected with the director through the chair of NH SVAC (the State Veterans Advisory Committee) after I tried to convince them to change their position on Defend the Guard. It resonated with me, deeply, and I wrote a multi-page email to the team behind the film with a list of bullet points of how my deployment experiences related to the stories being told. I asked how I could help spread the message, and they offered me the opportunity to host a screening!
With the upcoming floor vote (and hopefully subsequent Senate hearing/vote) on Defend the Guard, this is a great opportunity for synergy between this film and legislation in New Hampshire. After the movie I’ll be explaining what we can all do to push back against the DC war machine, and protect the next generation from repeating the mistakes of the last two decades.
Tickets are free, but limited. Get them here.
Hearing Alert: HB229 – Defend the Guard (Second Public Hearing)
I am a co-sponsor on House Bill 229, also known as the “Defend the Guard Act.” This bill will come before the State-Federal Relations and Veterans Affairs committee for a public hearing October 11th.
| WHAT | HB229 Hearing |
| WHEN | Wednesday, October 11, 10:00AM |
| WHERE | Legislative Office Building Concord, NH Room 206-208 |
| COMMITTEE | State-Federal Relations and Veteran’s Affairs |
The purpose of this bill is to require Congress to formally declare war before New Hampshire will send its National Guardsmen to a conflict zone. It is simultaneously a life-saving measure, a state’s rights assertion, and a call on our representatives in DC to properly follow the Constitution and use the powers granted to them. More information on the many states filing this type of legislation, and FAQ’s can be found here: https://defendtheguard.us/
This is a rare second chance at a public hearing. We need to flood the zone with supporters, so spread this far and wide. If you, or anyone you know, wishes to testify on behalf of this bill, please come out to the hearing, it is open to the public. Online testimony can also be submitted here, using the table above to populate the form. If you need help, reach out to me: tom@mannion4nh.com