Yuma Sun

VA pick draws concern over thin management record

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s selection of his White House doctor to run the massive Department of Veterans Affairs triggered concern Thursday among lawmakers and veterans groups about whether he has the experience to manage an agency paralyzed over Trump’s push to expand private care.

Ronny Jackson, a Navy rear admiral entrusted with the health of the past three presidents, is a lifelong physician whose positions on privatizin­g operations in the second largest federal department and addressing ballooning health care costs are unknown. First named to the top White House post by President Barack Obama, he would be new to running a big bureaucrac­y if given leadership over a department of 360,000 employees serving 9 million veterans.

In a statement, Trump praised Jackson as “highly trained and qualified.” But representa­tives of veterans aren’t sold on the choice, or on Trump’s decision a day earlier to fire VA Secretary David Shulkin.

“There is little that we know about Dr. Ronny Jackson’s vision and qualificat­ions,” said Paul Rieckhoff, founder and CEO of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America. “Our concern is whether President Trump was more interested in picking a secretary who would be politicall­y loyal rather than someone who can work across the aisle to fix long standing problems of bureaucrat­ic delay.”

Similar doubts were expressed by Veterans of Foreign Wars, which praised Jackson’s military background in a statement but pointed to a nominee biography devoid of “any experience working with the VA or with veterans, or managing any organizati­on of size, much less one as multifacet­ed as the Department of Veterans Affairs.” AMVETS echoed such sentiments.

“We look forward to a rigorous confirmati­on hearing,” Rieckhoff said.

Montana Sen. Jon Tester, top Democrat on the panel that will consider the nomination, said he had yet to determine if Jackson “is up to the job.”

It’s not clear from Jackson’s military service record how much, if any, management experience he has. His military assignment­s did not appear to include supervisio­n over a large department or unit. His Navy biography says he deployed to Iraq with a Marine unit and served as the emergency physician in charge of resuscitat­ive medicine for a trauma platoon.

Jackson joined the White House medical team in 2006 and is perhaps best known for his appearance before the press corps in January, announcing the results of Trump’s first physical in a performanc­e that showed he was quick-witted and unfailingl­y compliment­ary of Trump.

Marveling at the 71-yearold president’s good health, Jackson opined, “It’s just the way God made him.”

A White House official said Shulkin himself had recommende­d Jackson for an undersecre­tary position at the VA in the fall, and Trump ultimately decided he was more comfortabl­e with Jackson than with other top candidates. The official was not authorized to discuss personnel matters and spoke on condition of anonymity.

If confirmed by the Senate, Jackson would face immediate crises, like a multibilli­on 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.

Trump is seeking an aggressive expansion of the Choice program to make it easier for veterans to see private doctors outside the VA system at government expense, but proposals are stalled in Congress following a failed effort last week.

“We’re going to have real choice,” Trump said in Ohio. “That’s why I made some changes, because I wasn’t happy with it.”

Pending Jackson’s confirmati­on, Robert Wilkie, a former Pentagon undersecre­tary for personnel and readiness, is serving as the acting head of the VA.

Lawmakers said they needed to learn more about Jackson’s record.

Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson of Georgia, chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee that will review the nomination, declined to indicate his support. He stressed that he looked forward to “meeting Admiral Jackson and learning more about him.” Isakson, a moderate, has expressed skepticism in the past toward toward nominees who expressed strong views in favor of privatizat­ion.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, independen­t of Vermont and a former chairman of the panel, cautioned that Jackson would not be approved if he supported privatizin­g the VA. “Our job is to strengthen the VA in order to provide high-quality care to our veterans, not dismember it,” he said.

Shulkin, a physician and the lone Obama administra­tion holdover in Trump’s Cabinet, was unceremoni­ously fired late Wednesday by Trump in a tweet. Shulkin had enjoyed support from Trump for much of his first year in the administra­tion but support eroded last month after a bruising ethics scandal and political infighting at VA.

A native of Levelland, Texas, Jackson, 50, graduated from Texas A&M with a degree in marine biology, then from medical school at the University of Texas Medical Branch.

He headed to the Navy, then in 2005 joined a 2nd Marines regiment. Jackson was deployed to Iraq as the physician in charge of resuscitat­ive medicine for a trauma platoon, according to the White House.

Ned Price, a National Security Council spokesman under Obama, described the doctor as “the guy you always want to be around” because he’s affable and funny. But Price said it was difficult to believe the nomination was unrelated to the “glowing assessment” of Trump’s health that the doctor had provided.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JAN. 16 FILE PHOTO, White House physician Dr. Ronny Jackson speaks to reporters during the daily press briefing in the Brady press briefing room at the White House in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JAN. 16 FILE PHOTO, White House physician Dr. Ronny Jackson speaks to reporters during the daily press briefing in the Brady press briefing room at the White House in Washington.

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