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Amid Debt Ceiling Debate: VA Cuts Passed by House Give Corporate Dems Political Cover

Photograph Source: KOMUnews – CC BY 2.0
When the new House majority passed its grab bag of government spending cuts last month, setting up an on-going game of chicken with the White House over any federal debt limit increase, they also directed their f…

Photograph Source: KOMUnews – CC BY 2.0

When the new House majority passed its grab bag of government spending cuts last month, setting up an on-going game of chicken with the White House over any federal debt limit increase, they also directed their fire at essential services for military veterans, a constituency long courted by their own party. Included in the “Limit, Save, Grow Act of 2023,” was a proposed 22% reduction in funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

Right-wing Republicans scrambled to provide political cover for themselves by insisting that “our budget cutting plan doesn’t harm veterans.” Instead, claimed Mike Bost, a former Marine from Illinois who now chairs the House Veterans Affairs Committee, his  conservative colleagues were just trying to force a long-overdue discussion of whether VA funding is “actually helping veterans.”

Fortunately, a VA patient, elected to Congress last year, took the House floor to accuse the Republican majority of passing a “B.S. plan” that’s “an absolute betrayal and a disgrace.” As former Navy Officer Chris Deluzio (D-PA) noted, House Republicans are “threatening to blow up our economy and to push us into default unless we agree to cuts to the VA and veterans, and to so much else.  There is not a single protection, not a single one for veterans in their bill. …Millions of veterans are going to be screwed by this plan.  They won’t get the care they’ve earned, and they will have to wait longer for benefits.”

Deluzio’s fiery speech generated much media attention and set the tone for other Democrats, like Joe Biden and California Congressman Mark Takano, who have weighed in, with similar criticism of GOP hypocrisy. Democratic Party consultants and strategists are, no doubt, already sketching out the kind of attack adds—focusing on Republican support for VA benefit cuts—that will be aired to help the White House woo the “vet vote” away from right-wing candidates next year, who need to be defeated for myriad reasons.

A Timely Smokescreen

That forthcoming paid media blitz will have one downside. It will further obscure the fact that current threats to veterans’ programs are not just coming from the House majority or conservative Republicans in the Senate like Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) Biden himself is harming, rather than helping, veterans by undermining public provision of their care. Nevertheless, Moran, along with former Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, has just introduced a “Veterans Health Empowerment, Access, Leadership, and Transparency for our Heroes (HEALTH) ACT of 2023, that would force the administration to expand VA privatization even further.

As this political collaboration illustrates, the incremental defunding of direct care for nine million veterans has always been a bi-partisan project. From Obama to Trump and now Biden, three different presidential administrations have embraced the idea that turning VA patients into customers of the private healthcare industry is better public policy than strengthening the nation’s largest public healthcare system and best working model of socialized medicine.

VA outsourcing has greatly accelerated since a coalition of conservative Republicans and corporate Democrats passed the VA MISSION Act of 2018.  As implemented by Donald Trump—and, now, Biden himself–this legislation diverts more than $30 billion a year from the agency’s direct care budget and showers that money on private medical practices and for-profit hospitals often less well prepared to treat veterans. This is an amount roughly equivalent to the VA funding shortfall that would result from House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s biggest legislative achievement so far—the above-mentioned “Limit, Save, Grow Act of 2023.”

Due to the MISSION ACT, the VA has been partially converted into a Medicare-style payer of bills submitted by outside vendors, with many of the same paperwork hassles, lax quality controls, and opportunities for fraud and abuse. The powerful private interests which gained this lucrative new federal revenue stream are fighting to preserve and expand it. They include some of the same companies who are undermining traditional Medicare coverage by enlisting more than half of all seniors in Medicare Advantage plans, with active assistance from the Trump and Biden Administrations.

“Healthy Competition” Or Disadvantaging the VA?

As a House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing revealed in 2022, VA spending on private sector care increased by 116 percent in the years after passage of the MISSION Act, while funding for VA medical center staff grew by only 32 percent.  Since Chris Deluzio joined the committee in January of this year, he has been a rare House Democrat willing to question where this disastrous trend is headed.  At a recent hearing, attended by VA Secretary Denis McDonough, Deluzio said he was “proud to receive my healthcare at the VA,” noting that many research studies have confirmed its higher quality and cost-effectiveness relative to the private sector.

In an exchange with McDonough, Deluzio pointed out the continuing disparity between Biden Administration budget allocations for in-house vs. outsourced care for his fellow veterans. He then invited McDonough to “walk me through why we are seeing that growth on the one side and what is constraining the VA’s ability to do more within VA facilities?”  Per usual, McDonough hid behind the disingenuous claim that his hands are tied by Congress.

In reality, since January, 2021, the VA Secretary has failed to replace administrative rules, promulgated under Trump, which implemented the MISSION Act in ways that required the VA to refer patients to millions of appointments outside its own system, where wait times have often been longer. In a report to Congress last September, McDonough made the alarming, but accurate, prediction that the “VA is rapidly approaching a point where one-half of all care” will be outsourced. In the same document, he acknowledged that in-house care is cheaper, faster, of higher quality, and preferred by veterans themselves. But McDonough insists that his agency and its 1.2 million private contractors are, nevertheless, engaged in a form of “healthy competition” that’s beneficial to patients, providers, and taxpayers.

Front-line care-givers strongly disagree with this assessment. Several thousand responded to a survey conducted last year by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), the largest VA union. In a March, 2023 report called Disadvantaging the VA, they warned that their ability to care for veterans has been seriously compromised by Biden’s continuation of Trump Administration policies and personnel practices. Survey respondents reported service cut-backs, facility closing threats, lack of new hiring, and resulting staffing shortages, exacerbated by a disruptive shift of thousands of healthcare professionals from providing direct care to monitoring the problematic performance of private sector providers.

As the AFGE-backed report argues, “even within the statutory constraints of the MISSION Act, Secretary McDonough can promulgate new regulations that would prioritize medical necessity, quality, and timeliness of care, above all else,” as the basis for patient referrals outside the VA. As in the past (ie before Obama, Trump, and Biden), individual veterans could still be “sent outside the system if appropriate care was unavailable inside it.”

The Sinema-Moran Bomb

That course correction will never occur if Senator Sinema, a Veterans Affairs Committee member with 500,000 veterans among her constituents in Arizona, builds momentum for further privatization via her proposed Veterans HEALTH Act. Under the guise of expanding “veteran choice,” it would open the flood-gates for out-sourcing in new and even more destructive ways because it “would codify and expand the existing criteria for determining when a veteran is eligible for [non-VA] care…” Among the endorsers of this legislation are longtime proponents of VA privatization like the Koch Brothers-funded Concerned Veterans for America and the Trump-connected Independence Fund, plus the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

The conservative Legion and VFW both let their own members down five years ago when they pressured Congress to pass the MISSION Act, a surrender to corporate healthcare interests documented in our recent book, Our Veterans. Unlike these old-line organizations, smaller progressive advocacy groups like Common Defense and Veterans for Peace have challenged VA privatization and related bi-partisan assaults on social programs for all poor and working-class Americans. Two years ago, for example, Common Defense challenged Sinema’s ties to the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries, two major beneficiaries of VA outsourcing.

Five former members of the military, serving on her own veterans’ advisory council resigned in protest and their action was amplified in a seven-figure ad buy. Air Force veteran Sylvia Gonzalez Andersh was among those blasting the Senator for “answering to big donors rather than your own people.”

Common Defense members and other Arizona voters betrayed by Sinema are now rallying behind Congressman Ruben Gallego, a 43-year old Marine combat veteran, who is her likely Democratic opponent next year. The son of immigrants from Columbia and Mexico and a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, Gallego launched his campaign in January at an event with fellow veterans at a Legion post in Guadalupe, Arizona. In that announcement and other interviews, he linked his own struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder to his decision to enter politics and fight for expanded healthcare access through public programs like Medicare and the VA. “The rich and the powerful, they don’t need more advocates,” Gallego says. “It’s the people who are trying to decide between groceries and utilities who need a fighter for them.”


This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Steve Early - Suzanne Gordon.


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