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Trump’s plans rattle veterans groups

VA candidate’s idea would alter much of medical system

- By Evan Halper Washington Bureau evan.halper@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s flair for connecting with veterans won him an overwhelmi­ng share of their votes, but the durability of the alliance is already being tested as Trump’s search for a Veterans Affairs secretary veers in a direction that has alarmed some of America’s most influentia­l retired soldiers.

Under pressure from conservati­ve activists, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and organizati­ons funded by the Koch brothers, Trump is contemplat­ing choosing an agency chief who would upend the veterans health care system. That would come over the protest of the country’s major veterans groups.

An appointmen­t like that could prove an early test of whether the voters who backed Trump in November will continue to stick with him when his agenda smacks into interest groups that have been crusading on their behalf for decades.

And the selection process has set up the Veterans Affairs department to be a possible test case of the political impact of infusing the free-market approach championed by some conservati­ve groups into a major government bureaucrac­y that serves millions of Trump’s most fervent supporters.

Which way Trump will turn remains very much uncertain. More than a dozen names of potentiall­y serious candidates have been floated.

Sarah Palin’s name has been raised. Former Massachuse­tts Sen. Scott Brown has openly sought the job. Some in the transition team have touted Toby Cosgrove, the CEO of the Cleveland Clinic and a cardiac surgeon who served in Vietnam. Obama considered him for the job several years ago.

Most alarming to some of the country’s main veterans groups is Pete Hegseth, the former executive director of Concerned Veterans for America, one of a network of nonprofit groups bankrolled by billionair­e industrial­ists Charles and David Koch. The 36-yearold Hegseth, a Fox News contributo­r, has met with Trump more than once.

The dispute within Trump’s circle about which way to go helps account for the fact that the VA is among the last Cabinet positions without a designee.

The department, which provides health care to 9 million veterans at nearly 1,300 facilities, has long been a political flashpoint. It is a bureaucrac­y struggling to overcome highprofil­e problems.

The troubles reached a crisis in 2014, leading President Obama to clean house and appoint Robert McDonald, the former CEO of Procter and Gamble, as the new secretary.

Large veterans groups, including the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars, have applauded the progress the department has made since then.

The groups, which represent a combined 5.5 million veterans, suggested they wanted to continue the current policies, and for a time, reports circulated that Trump might keep McDonald, a Republican, in the job.

But Trump has since signaled more radical plans.

During the campaign, Trump indicated support for the blueprint proposed by the Concerned Veterans group, which would offer all veterans the option of acquiring health care at the doctor of their choosing through a Medicare-style system, instead of routing them automatica­lly through VA facilities.

The larger veterans groups warn that approach could cripple the current system and leave many with complex medical problems inadequate options for treatment.

Concerned Veterans operates in a very different orbit than most of the major veterans organizati­ons, which are heavily involved in guiding management decisions at the VA and helping their members gain access to services. It instead works with Republican lawmakers to take aim at the department.

“If Pete Hegseth is named secretary, it would be the Kochs’ most spectacula­r win ever,” said Paul Rieckhoff, founder of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America. “There is such stiff opposition to him.”

“We don’t want to throw the baby out with the bath water,” Rieckhoff added.

Rieckhoff’s group and other major organizati­ons have urgently requested to meet with Trump. They have not been able to get a commitment. The transition team instead sent a delegation to talk with them which included Omarosa Manigault, a star of Trump’s reality TV show “The Apprentice.”

“It is actually insulting,” said Rieckhoff. “The highest-ranking person the leading veterans services organizati­ons have met with is Omarosa.”

Transition officials did not respond to requests for comment. As Trump considers his options, among those advising him on the VA transition team is Darin Selnick, a senior adviser at Concerned Veterans. The more mainstream veterans groups, meanwhile, are still waiting for their meeting.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? Donald Trump courted veterans during the presidenti­al campaign, such as the Bay of Pigs Veterans Associatio­n in Miami.
EVAN VUCCI/AP Donald Trump courted veterans during the presidenti­al campaign, such as the Bay of Pigs Veterans Associatio­n in Miami.
 ??  ?? Hegseth
Hegseth
 ??  ?? Palin
Palin
 ??  ?? Brown
Brown
 ??  ?? Cosgrove
Cosgrove

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