Houston Chronicle

Clinton pushes back against GOP on veterans’ health issues

-

DERRY, N.H. — Hillary Rodham Clinton outlined steps to improve the Department of Veterans Affairs on Tuesday, casting herself as a protector against proposals to privatize the sprawling health care system for those who have served in the military.

In a pre-Veterans Day event, the Democratic presidenti­al candidate said she would seek to improve veterans’ health care, modernize veterans’ benefits system and address an unwieldy bureaucrac­y that was exposed in a scandal involving chronic delays for those seeking medical care or to have their claims processed.

“These problems are serious, systemic and unacceptab­le. They need to be fixed,” Clinton said at a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall. She added: “Privatizat­ion is a betrayal, plain and simple, and I am not going to let it happen.”

Clinton’s town hall meeting included questions about how she might tackle the threat posed by Islamic State militants if she becomes commander in chief. Clinton said in response to a question that she does not currently support a declaratio­n of war against the Islamic State given the diffuse nature of the group and the potential costs. “If you have a declaratio­n of war you better have a budget that backs it up,” she said.

Clinton’s plan for veterans would seek fundamenta­l changes to veterans’ health care to ensure access to high quality health care in a timely fashion and address the backlog in claims. She said within the first 30 days of taking office she would convene the defense secretary and VA secretary for regular meetings and there would be “zero tolerance” for abuses and delays within the system.

Clinton’s campaign has pointed to plans circulated by the conservati­ve Concerned Veterans for America that would restructur­e the Veterans Health Administra­tion into a government chartered nonprofit corporatio­n to help it compete with the private sector. Republican­s say she has overstated efforts to privatize veterans’ health care.

Responding to her proposals, GOP officials said Clinton was offering hypocrisy, noting that her plan would allow the government to contract with the private sector for certain services such as special inpatient or surgical procedures and access to mental health and substance abuse treatment when the VA couldn’t provide timely access to care.

“For her to accuse me and my Republican colleagues of wanting to ‘privatize’ the VA is, of course, inaccurate and offensive,” Arizona Sen. John McCain said in a statement. He pointed to a veterans’ bill signed into law last year by President Barack Obama that included an expansion of private care options.

Clinton was forced to backtrack last month after she said in an interview with MSNBC that the veterans’ health care scandal was not “as widespread” as suggested, and accused Republican­s of politicizi­ng the agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States