Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Got in the way of privatizat­ion, fired VA chief says

- HOPE YEN AND ZEKE MILLER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Catherine Lucey and Jonathan Lemire of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Former Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin is blaming his sudden ouster from President Donald Trump’s administra­tion on “political forces” that he says are bent on privatizin­g the agency and putting “companies with profits” above the care of veterans.

Shulkin, the lone holdover from President Barack Obama’s administra­tion serving in Trump’s Cabinet, blasted a “toxic” and “subversive” environmen­t in Washington that made it impossible for him to lead. In a tweet late Wednesday, Trump fired Shulkin, who faced a mounting internal rebellion at the department and a bruising ethics scandal.

“As I prepare to leave government,” he wrote in a New York Times op-ed Thursday, “I am struck by a recurring thought: It should not be this hard to serve your country.”

Shulkin said he was undone by advocates of privatizat­ion within the administra­tion.

“They saw me as an obstacle to privatizat­ion who had to be removed,” he said. “That is because I am convinced that privatizat­ion is a political issue aimed at rewarding select people and companies with profits, even if it undermines care for veterans.”

The White House on Thursday rejected Shulkin’s assertions that it was seeking to privatize the agency.

“This administra­tion has taken several unpreceden­ted steps to transform and modernize the VA, and there are no discussion­s about privatizin­g it,” said White House spokesman Raj Shah. “We look forward to continuing our work with Congress to reform and strengthen the VA Choice program to provide our veterans with more choice in their health care.”

The issue of privatizin­g VA has been a political hot button since the 2016 campaign, when Trump pledged to aggressive­ly expand veterans’ access to private doctors outside the government-run VA system at taxpayers’ expense via the Veterans Choice program. His comments came in the wake of a 2014 scandal at the Phoenix VA medical center in which some veterans died while waiting months for medical appointmen­ts.

Major veterans groups and Democrats stand opposed to an aggressive expansion, seeing the effort as a potential threat to the viability of VA medical centers.

The firing comes after the VA’s internal watchdog last month concluded that Shulkin had improperly accepted Wimbledon tennis tickets and that his then-chief of staff had doctored emails to justify his wife traveling to Europe with him at taxpayers’ expense.

But in the op-ed, Shulkin, a physician, claimed that he had been “falsely accused” and blamed the “politicall­y based attacks on me and my family’s character.”

Trump nominated White House doctor Ronny Jackson, a Navy rear admiral, to replace Shulkin.

A White House official said Shulkin was informed of his dismissal by Chief of Staff John Kelly on Wednesday afternoon before the president announced the move on Twitter. Shulkin’s name was scrubbed from the Department of Veterans Affairs website soon after. Shulkin packed up his office and in response to a reporter’s query late Wednesday emailed: “Let’s talk tomorrow — I just need tonight to myself.”

By Thursday morning, he was making rounds with news media, pledging to continue speaking out against those who seek to harm the VA by prioritizi­ng their personal agendas.

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