Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Biggest vets groups step up pressure on Donald Trump to fire Wilkie

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON » Stepping up pressure, the nation’s six largest veterans groups on Wednesday called on President Donald Trump to immediatel­y fire Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie over the mishandlin­g of a congressio­nal aide’s allegation of a sexual assault at a VA hospital.

In a letter to the White House, the groups said they had lost all confidence in Wilkie’s ability to lead the government’s second- largest department following a blistering audit last week that found he had acted unprofessi­onally if not unethicall­y in disparagin­g the aide. The groups pressed Trump to act in the last weeks of his administra­tion since Wilkie had refused to accept responsibi­lity and was refusing to resign.

“Sexual assault and harassment have no place in the VA or our society,” according to the letter from the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, AMVETS, Paralyzed Veterans of America and Vietnam Veterans of America.

“This is a tremendous breach of trust among veterans,” they wrote.

The groups are adding pressure on Trump after lawmakers from both parties expressed concern about VA’s leadership and at least a dozen veterans organizati­ons — as well as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D- Md. — last week called for Wilkie’s resignatio­n.

Wilkie has denied wrongdoing. In response to calls for his resignatio­n, the VA says Wilkie “will continue to lead the department.”

The investigat­ion by the Veterans Affairs’ inspector general concluded that Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit Andrea Goldstein, a senior policy adviser to Democratic Rep. Mark Takano, who is chair of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, after she alleged in September 2019 that a man at the VA medical center in Washington, D. C., had physically assaulted her.

The inspector general found that Wilkie’s disparagin­g comments about Goldstein, a Navy veteran, as a repeat complainer as well as the overall “tone” he set influenced his staff to spread negative informatio­n about her while ignoring known problems of harassment at the facility.

Wilkie and other senior officials had declined to fully cooperate with the investigat­ion by VA Inspector General Michael Missal. For that reason, Missal said he could not conclude whether Wilkie had violated government policies or laws, allegedly by personally digging into the woman’s past.

The case of Goldstein, who agreed to be publicly identified, was ultimately closed by the inspector general’s office and Justice Department earlier this year due to a lack of enough evidence to bring charges.

Wilkie is Trump’s second VA secretary after David Shulkin was fired in 2018.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On July 7, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Richard Wilkie speaks at the National Press Club in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On July 7, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Richard Wilkie speaks at the National Press Club in Washington.

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