Veterans running for office have never had a stronger personal brand or more political backing. To hold onto or win back seats in Congress, both major parties have recruited many candidates whose resume includes past military service. Across the political spectrum, various Super PACs have backed this effort to increase the veteran population on Capitol Hill. And one such group, the With Honor Fund, claims that electing more vets will help restore āpublic trustā in Congress and reduce āthe extreme partisanship that has corroded our national legislature.ā
With Honor is being funded by the richest man in the world, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. He and his wife have pledged $10 million to assist 33 Congressional hopefuls this Fall (19 Democrats and 14 Republicans). If elected, these Bezos-backed candidates have promised to avoid āhyper-partisanshipā and embrace political ācompromise,ā for the good of our country and veterans in particular
My own experience, as a journalist covering veteransā affairs, leads me to question this approach for two reasons. First, past military service does not insure trust-worthyāor even pro-veteran–behavior inside the Beltway, as revealed by the federal indictment of former Marine, Duncan Hunter Jr., a five-term Republican Congressman from Southern California.
Second, ābi-partisanshipā has been the guiding principle of recent Congressional action adversely affecting the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), its 300,000 employees, and nine million patients. Former military men and women, in both parties, have jeopardized the quality of veteransā care by embracing privatization of VHA services and leaving the governmentās own hospitals and clinics for veterans increasingly under-funded and under-staffed.
This out-sourcing trend got a further boost in May when Congress passed the VA MISSION Act. Backed by veterans like the late Arizona Senator John McCain and Massachusetts Congressman Seth Moulton, the MISSION Act diverts billions of dollars from the VHAās skilled and dedicated salaried workforce. It steers that money instead toward private doctors and for-profit hospitals, which, as studies document, have little experience treating veterans.
Nevertheless, on the campaign trail this fall, even Democrats like Montana Senator Jon Tester are touting the MISSION Act as a positive example of their willingness to compromise with President Trump (who, of course, has reciprocated by working hard to defeat Tester).
A Blue Falcon
During an on-going debate about the future of the VHA, many a patriotic speech has been made, from the White House on down, about how much everyone in Washington loves and cares for veterans. But actions speak louder than wordsāand even a personal biography brimming with past military heroism can be deceiving.
When Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran Duncan Hunter first ran for his fatherās old seat in Congress ten years ago, he highlighted his three tours of combat duty, including participation in the battle for Falluja. āThe U.S. Congress needs more military veterans, people who have walked the walk,ā Hunter told the press. On the basis of his Marine credentials, he joined the House Armed Services Committee after getting elected and, more recently, became a rabid Trump supporter. Yet, according to the NY Times, it didnāt take Hunter long to also become āa āblue falcon,ā military slang for someone willing to sacrifice his friends for his own benefit.ā
That behavior manifested itself in Hunterās approach to constituent serviceāand, later, his alleged misappropriation of $250,000 in campaign funds. According to fellow veterans interviewed by the Times, their Congressman would āintervene in cases when a veteran was in troubleāas in one case when a veteran ended up in a Mexican jail. But, when it came to supporting military-friendly policies Mr. Hunter did little, they say.ā
For example, despite constituent appeals, Hunter would not push hard for a requirement that military personnel facing less-than-honorable discharges (and denial of VHA benefits) be given a prior mental health assessment by the Defense Department. Instead, Hunter started using campaign funds to cover his own lavish personal spending, listing some improper payments as gifts for āwounded warriors,ā according to his 47-page indictment. Since being charged with fraud and campaign finance violations, Hunter has gallantly tried to shift the blame to his co-defendant and wife.Ā His lawyer now argues that evidence of Hunterās own āinfidelity, irresponsibility, or alcohol dependence, once properly understoodā¦does not equate to criminal activity.ā (So much for Semper Fi!)
Chewed Up and Spit Out?
Needless to say, such scandals, involving any House member, hardly boost public confidence in Congress. Veterans, in particular, expressed anger about Hunterās alleged betrayal of their trust. Surprisingly, Ammar Campa-Najjarāthe 29- year old Latino-Arab-American Democrat running against Hunterātook the more exculpatory view that his opponent was a Marine who ānever made it back from the battlefield,ā a man who ālost his wayā in Washington, which āchewed him up and spat him out.ā (As their race tightens, HunterĀ has reciprocated by smearing Campa-Najjar as an Islamic terrorist sympathizer and national security risk.)
If Hunterās alleged misconduct on the job and resulting legal difficulties are indeed related to post-combat behavioral changes, he is not the first veteran, in public life, to display such problems. The Times reported on Oct. 3 that āJason Kander, a war veteran who became a rising star in the Democratic Party abruptly dropped out of a Kansas City mayoral race, saying he needed to focus on healing from post-traumatic stress disorder.ā At the time of his abrupt withdrawal, Kanderāa best-selling author and non-profit group leaderāwas ābreaking records with his campaignās fundraising.āĀ But, he told The Times, āinstead of celebrating that accomplishment, I found myself on the phone with the VAās Veterans Crisis Line, tearfully conceding that, yes, I have had suicidal thoughts. And it wasnāt the first time.ā
There are thousands of men and women, like Kander, who struggle every day with service related conditions that interfere with normal family life, going back to school, holding a job, and even getting a good nightās sleep many years after their participation in combat. To treat varied and complex wounds of war, they need a veteransā health care system that is adequately funded and staffed with experienced care-givers, like the suicide prevention specialists who assisted Kander. Instead, would-be privatizers of the VHA want to contract out such services, for the benefit of politically connected private firms, like the sketchy vendor that Republican Senator Dean Heller has been trying to foist on a veteransā hospital in Reno, Nevada. (See https://www.nevadacurrent.com/2018/10/25/guest-op-ed-hellers-penchant-fā¦)
Ā Ignored By The Officer Class
Veterans who are eligible for VHA coverage get the benefit of high quality care for wounds of war that can be mental, as well as physical, and very hard to treat. Now more than ever, they need reliable allies like the 70 House Democrats and handful of Senators who voted against the MISSION Act last May. Most of these dissenters, like Bernie Sanders, Nancy Pelosi, and Raul Grijalva never wore a uniform nor did they ever champion the āwarrior mentalityā so prized by Rep. Hunter.
But they did join hands with labor and veteransā groups to oppose privatization and criticized the billionaire Koch Brothers for pushing this agenda, despite its manifest unpopularity among poor and working class veterans who use the VHA. In contrast, their patient care needs were often neglected or ignored by the well-known former officersāMcCain, Moulton, Hunter, etc.āwho are among the 19 percent of all members of Congress who did serve in the military (but sometimes donāt use the VHA).
When veterans and their families go to the polls on Nov. 6, they should remember that service to our nation takes many forms.Ā In Congress, the interests of those who enlisted or were drafted are sometimes best served by men and women with no military background.
Much needed changes in the composition of the House and Senate can create new opportunities, next year, to reverse some of the damage done to the VHA by President Trump and his bi-partisan helpers. A truly pro-veteran Congress will defend a veteransā healthcare system that keeps health, healing, and hope in the hands of those who genuinely care about their patients, as opposed to private contractors just trying to profit from them.
Bay area journalist Suzanne Gordonās latest book is Wounds of War:Ā How the VA Delivers Health, Healing, and Hope to the Nationās Veterans (Cornell University Press). She can be reached at [email protected]
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