Enterprise-Record (Chico)

American Legion, Pelosi call for VA chief’s ouster

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON » The nation’s largest veterans organizati­on and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Saturday joined the growing calls for the ouster of President Donald Trump’s Veterans Affairs chief, under fire after a government audit found he acted unprofessi­onally, if not unethicall­y, in the handling of a congressio­nal aide’s allegation of sexual assault at a VA hospital.

“It is unfair to expect accountabi­lity from the nearly 400,000 VA employees and not demand the same from its top executive. It is clear that Secretary Robert Wilkie failed to meet the standard that the veteran who came forward with the complaint deserved,” the American Legion’s national commander, James W. “Bill” Oxford, said in a statement. He urged Wilkie and several other top VA officials cited in the report to resign because of their “violation of trust” of the agency’s commitment to not “tolerate harassment of any kind.”

Pelosi, D- Calif., said Wilkie “has lost the trust and confidence to serve, and he must immediatel­y resign.” She said Wilkie “has not only been derelict in his duty to combat sexual harassment, but has been complicit in the continuati­on of a VA culture that tolerates this epidemic.”

The VA said Wilkie, who has denied wrongdoing, doesn’t intend to resign.

The demands for Wilkie’s resignatio­n came a day after numerous veterans groups expressed similar outrage and sought Wilkie’s dismissal. Those organizati­ons include Veterans of Foreign Wars, Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, Disabled American Veterans, AMVETS, Paralyzed Veterans of America and the Modern Military Associatio­n of America, and they said they had lost confidence that Wilkie could effectivel­y lead the department, which is responsibl­e for the care of 9 million veterans.

An investigat­ion by the Veterans Affairs’ inspector general on Thursday concluded that Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit Andrea Goldstein, a senior policy adviser to Democratic Rep. Mark Takano, chairman 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.

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