Behind Trump’s Big-Money Battle to Shake Up the VA: “I Think It’s an Existential Threat”

Investigators scrambled to find connections between the shocking violence in New Orleans and Las Vegas. Fortunately, they discovered no evidence of a larger terrorist plot linking Shamsud-Din Jabbar, who allegedly murdered 14 people on Bourbon Street with his pickup truck, to Matthew Livelsberger, who shot himself in the head and then blew himself up behind the wheel of a Tesla Cybertruck parked in the driveway of the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas. But the two men did have one significant thing in common: years serving in war zones with the US Army. Livelsberger was explicit about how his time in uniform contributed to his state of mind, leaving a note that said, “I need to cleanse my mind of the brothers I’ve lost, and relieve myself of the burden of the lives I took.”

Whether Jabbar’s military experience shaped his motivations remains unclear. Yet the deaths of both men were a reminder of the epidemic of mental health troubles plaguing American veterans: Approximately 6,000 vets commit suicide every year, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. “We actually just lost one of our best veteran leaders in December,” says Allison Jaslow, the CEO of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. “I don’t know a vet who doesn’t know someone, another vet, who has died by suicide.”

As if that picture weren’t troubling enough, the second Donald Trump administration looks poised to bring major changes to the VA, the agency that provides health care to 9 million vets. And critics say these changes appear to be driven by big, right-wing money from the likes of the Koch brothers, the billionaire-backed donor network that for decades has promoted libertarian causes through think tanks, legal groups, and advocacy organizations.

“What the Koch brothers are trying to prove is that privatization works and government is bad,” says Paul Rieckhoff, an Army veteran who fought in Iraq before becoming a veterans advocate and podcaster. “And the VA is their test case.” Senator Tammy Duckworth—who lost both legs in 2004 when the Army Black Hawk helicopter she was piloting was shot down over Iraq—is even blunter. “It’s money-driven,” the Illinois Democrat says. “The last time Trump was president he had this shadow VA Cabinet at Mar-a-Lago. This bunch, people who never served themselves, they’re just trying to make money off the backs of veterans.”

Trump’s previous handling of the VA was tumultuous. Initially he elevated Dr. David Shulkin, an Obama administration official who had run major hospital systems, to lead the agency. A little more than one year later, though, Trump abruptly tweeted that he was replacing Shulkin with his White House physician, Dr. Ronny Jackson. That move collapsed under the weight of misconduct allegations against Jackson. (At the time, Jackson called the allegations “baseless and anonymous attacks on my character and integrity.”) Trump’s next choice, Robert Wilkie, was successfully installed but was later accused of trying to help discredit a victim who made allegations of sexual assault inside a VA medical center. (Wilkie has called the accusations against him “false.”)

Meanwhile, a plan to privatize more of the VA’s services was being debated. Shulkin tells me he was startled, during a 2018 White House meeting on the subject, when Trump demanded to get Pete Hegseth on the phone to ask his opinion. At the time, Hegseth was a Fox News contributor and the former executive director of the Concerned Veterans for America—an advocacy group funded by the Koch brothers. CVA championed giving vets increased access to private doctors; the bills, either way, would be paid with tax dollars.

Shulkin says Hegseth—who Trump has now nominated to become Secretary of Defense—endorsed greater privatization, and when Shulkin pushed back by pointing to his assessment that it could cost the government at least $50 billion a year, Trump agreed to a less extensive version of the Veterans’ Choice Program. “Part of what every health care executive has to balance is doing the right thing with limited resources,” Shulkin says. “But if you’re a political ideologue, you don’t worry about that. You just say, ‘This is the way the world should be and it’s going to be somebody else’s problem to figure out how to pay for it.’”

The US Department of Veterans Affairs building is seen on August 21, 2024 in Washington, DC.

by Tierney L. Cross/Getty Images.

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