The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Shulkin rejects reports he left VA office ‘voluntaril­y’

Vacuum at top until Senate can confirm successor.

- By David Weigel

WASHINGTON — Former Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin said Sunday that he did not voluntaril­y leave his office, clashing with the White House’s descriptio­n of his exit and adding to questions about who will run the department until a new secretary is confirmed.

“I would not resign, because I’m committed to making sure this job was seen through to the very end,” Shulkin said in an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” with Jake Tapper. “I did not resign.”

Whether Shulkin resigned or was fired would have bearing on who leads the Department of Veterans Affairs until the president’s nominee, Ronny L. Jackson, is confirmed by the Senate. According to federal statutes, the departure of a Senate-confirmed secretary elevates the department’s deputy secretary to that position until a permanent replacemen­t arrives.

But VA’s deputy secretary, Tom Bowman, has already been passed over by a White House that has wanted to overhaul the department’s leadership. Robert Wilkie, undersecre­tary of defense for personnel and readiness, is now running VA. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 empowers the president to bypass a deputy and install anyone who has been confirmed by the Senate for any position “to perform the functions and duties of the vacant office temporaril­y in an acting capacity.”

The White House previously used that power to

install Mick Mulvaney, the Senate-confirmed OMB director, to lead the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, a move that is still being litigated by CFPB Deputy Director Leandra English. But Mulvaney’s predecesso­r, Richard Cordray, had resigned to run for governor of Ohio. Shulkin told The Washington Post on Friday, as he told CNN on Sunday, that he did not resign and was instead fired after being undermined by political appointees.

“I don’t think that this was the president,” Shulkin told Tapper.

“The president is committed to improving the care for veterans. These appointees had a belief that there was a different way to do that than I did ... these individual­s, when they didn’t see that their way was being adopted, used subversive techniques to change the leadership at VA.”

Shulkin’s descripton of what happened clashes with the Trump administra­tion’s. On Friday, Shulkin told The Post that he was told by White House Chief of Staff John Kelly that he was being pushed out. But Saturday, deputy White House

press secretary Lindsay Walters told Politico that “Secretary Shulkin resigned from his position as Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs.”

The questions about Shulkin’s removal may well end up in court. Democrats, who, like Shulkin, believe that the Trump administra­tion is attempting to elevate people who favor privatizin­g VA’s services, could sue over any major decisions made by Wilkie, arguing that the 1998 law on vacancies does not apply when appointees are fired.

“I would strongly suspect that, if you get rid of Shulkin, who opposed privatizat­ion, and you put Dr. Jackson in, that is what his mission will be,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who caucuses with Democrats, said Sunday on CNN.

“Without exception, the major veterans organizati­ons say, we have got to strengthen VA, not dismember it, not privatize it. And I will do everything I can as a member of the veterans committee not to approve any nominee who is not going to strengthen VA and who will oppose privatizat­ion.”

 ?? ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES ?? Appearing Sunday on CNN, former Veteran Affairs Secretary David Shulkin rejected the White House’s descriptio­n of his departure as a resignatio­n. “I would not resign,” he said.
ALEX WONG / GETTY IMAGES Appearing Sunday on CNN, former Veteran Affairs Secretary David Shulkin rejected the White House’s descriptio­n of his departure as a resignatio­n. “I would not resign,” he said.

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