The Palm Beach Post

Trump considerin­g Mast to lead VA

Palm City congressma­n on the list of candidates for still-vacant position.

- By Christine Stapleton Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

President Donald Trump is considerin­g Palm City Republican U.S. Rep. Brian Mast for the position of Veterans Affairs secretary, a position still vacant after White House physician Dr. Ronny Jackson withdrew his controvers­ial nomination for the post last month.

In a statement released Thursday afternoon, Mast said, “It is an honor to be considered to serve my fellow veterans and their families at the highest possible level.”

Mast is among the list of candidates for the job heading an agency of 360,000 employees serving 9 million veterans.

White House officials have met with former Florida Rep. Jeff Miller, a Republican who once led the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, according to the Associated Press.

Ironically, Trump asked Mast’s opinion of possible candidates during a dinner in December at the Mar-a-Lago Club. Mast put in a good word for Miller.

“He’s obviously seen all the issues that have come through in terms of constituen­ts,” Mast said of Miller. “I don’t think there’s somebody else that’s on the shortlist ... that has more experience with seeing the complaints firsthand. I would be very hopeful for a man like Jeff Miller to fill that role.”

Mast, 37, lives in Palm City with

his wife, Brianna, and three school-age children, Magnum, Maverick and Madeline. According to his congressio­nal profile page, Mast earned a degree from the Harvard Extension School. The type of degree and his major are not listed and his profile does not include any experience in hospital management.

Mast is the first member of Congress to open a satellite office in a VA facility, setting up shop in the West Palm Beach VA to meet with veterans. He was wounded while serving in Afghanista­n in 2010, which resulted in the amputation of both of his legs.

White House officials have also met with another candidate, Ron Nichol, a senior adviser to The Boston Consulting Group, who helped organize the president’s transition. Acting VA Secretary Robert Wilkie, a former Pentagon undersecre­tary for personnel and readiness, and Samuel Spagnolo, the president of the National Associatio­n of Veterans Affairs Physicians and Dentists, are also under considerat­ion for the post, according to the AP report.

VA officials have told some veterans groups they are preparing for the possibilit­y that the agency won’t have a permanent VA secretary in place for another three months as Trump mulls over replacemen­t candidates.

The VA faces problems demanding immediate attention, including a multi-billion dollar revamp of electronic medical records now in limbo that members of Congress fear will prove too costly and wasteful, and a budget shortfall in the coming weeks in its private-sector Veterans Choice program.

The House is slated to vote on a wide-ranging bill next week that would give veterans more freedom to see doctors outside the VA health system and fill the budget shortfall, a major step toward fulfilling Trump’s promise to expand private care for veterans.

The VA post became vacant after Trump fired VA Secretary David Shulkin earlier this year. Trump’s first choice for the top VA post, Jackson, withdrew in April.

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