National Post (National Edition)

TRUMP FIRES VETERANS AFFAIRS SECRETARY DAVID SHULKIN AFTER ETHICS SCANDAL.

- Hope yen anD Zeke Miler

WASHINGTON • U.S. President Donald Trump fired Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin on Wednesday in the wake of a bruising ethics scandal and a mounting rebellion within the agency.

Shulkin is the second Cabinet secretary to depart over controvers­ies involving expensive travel, following former Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price’s resignatio­n last September.

Trump is nominating Rear Admiral Ronny Jackson to succeed Shulkin, a former Obama administra­tion official and the first non-veteran ever to head the VA. Jackson has served since 2013 as the Physician to the President, and gained a national profile earlier this year for holding a sweeping press conference on the president’s health.

Trump has selected Robert Wilkie, the Under Secretary of Defence for Personnel and Readiness, to serve as the acting head of the VA. It is government’s second largest department, responsibl­e for nine million military veterans in more than 1,700 government-run health facilities. The selection of Wilkie bypasses VA Deputy Secretary Tom Bowman, who has come under criticism for being too moderate to push Trump’s agenda of fixing veterans’ care.

Shulkin had continued to insist he had the full confidence of the White House amid continuing investigat­ions over his travel and leadership of the department. He had agreed to reimburse the government more than US$4,000 after the VA’s internal watchdog concluded last month that he had improperly accepted Wimbledon tennis tickets and that his then-chief of staff had doctored emails to justify his wife travelling to Europe with him at taxpayer expense. Shulkin also blamed internal drama at the agency on a half-dozen or so political appointees who were rebelling against him and Bowman, insisting he had White House backing to fire them.

But the continuing VA infighting and a fresh raft of VA watchdog reports documentin­g leadership failures and spending waste — as well as fresh allegation­s being reviewed by the IG that Shulkin used a member of his security detail to run personal errands — proved too much of a distractio­n.

It was the latest in a series of departures for top administra­tion officials, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who was fired by Trump earlier this month.

The sudden departure comes as Trump is currently seeking to expand the Veterans Choice program, a campaign promise that major veterans’ groups worry could be an unwanted step toward privatizin­g VA health care. His plan remains in limbo in Congress after lawmakers declined last week to include it in a spending bill.

Having pushed through legislatio­n in Trump’s first year making it easier to fire bad VA employees and speed disability appeals, Shulkin leaves behind a department in disarray. Several projects remain unfinished, including a multibilli­on-dollar overhaul of electronic medical records aimed at speeding up wait times for veterans seeking medical care as well as expanded mental health treatment for veterans at higher risk of suicide.

During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump repeatedly pledged to fix the VA, which was still reeling after a 2014 scandal at the Phoenix VA medical centre, in which veterans waited months for care even as VA employees created secret waiting lists to cover up delays. Criticizin­g the department as “the most corrupt,” Trump said he would bring accountabi­lity and expand access to private doctors, promising to triple the number of veterans “seeing the doctor of their choice.”

More than 30 per cent of VA appointmen­ts are made in the private sector.

The son of an Army psychiatri­st and grandson of a VA pharmacist, Shulkin is a former president of the Morristown Medical Center in New Jersey. He was president and CEO of the Beth Israel Medical Center in New York and chief medical officer at the University of Pennsylvan­ia Health System.

Shulkin delivered multiple legislativ­e victories for Trump during his first year at the agency, from a bill that clears a fast path to firing employees accused of misconduct to measures aimed at easing the backlog of benefit appeals. He oversaw creation of a 24-hour hotline for veteran complaints and improved transparen­cy, posting wait times for medical appointmen­ts at each facility and other quality-control measures consistent with many private sector hospitals.

“He also deserves some credit for holding the ship together during these very turbulent first 15 months of the Trump administra­tion, just keeping the VA moving forward,” said Philip Carter, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, where he focuses on veterans issues.

Shulkin’s biggest weakness, Carter said, was that he didn’t connect with the president’s allies. “That was always festering beneath the surface — he was an Obama holdover,” Carter said. “And stylistica­lly he’s not of the same world as President Trump. He never quite clicked with the president’s inner circle.”

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