The Senate easily cleared President Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) on Monday.
Senators voted 86-9 on Robert Wilkie’s nomination to be the VA secretary.
Democratic Sens. Cory Booker (N.J.), Dianne Feinstein (Calif.), Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Kamala Harris (Calif.), Ed Markey (Mass.), Jeff Merkley (Ore.), Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), Ron Wyden (Ore.) and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders (Vt.) voted against the nomination.
The nine “no” votes make Wilkie the first VA secretary to have senators vote against their nomination since the post was elevated to a Cabinet-level position in 1989.
Trump applauded the vote on Twitter:
Wilkie’s confirmation gives the VA its first Senate-confirmed secretary since Trump fired David Shulkin in March amid months of controversy over allegations of misusing taxpayer funds.
{mosads}“I am confident that Robert Wilkie is the right leader because he has the expertise, the judgement and the character to take on the challenges that lie ahead and will bring stability and leadership to the VA. I look forward to working with him to help transform the VA into a department worthy of our veterans,” Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) said after the vote.
But Jackson
withdrew his nomination in April amid a firestorm of accusations of professional misconduct that publicly surfaced days before his confirmation hearing, including allegations that he provided a “large supply” of opioid painkillers to a White House military staffer. Jackson called the allegations “false and fabricated.”
By comparison, Wilkie’s nomination was relatively drama-free.
Questions were temporarily raised about his nomination when The Washington Post reported that Wilkie has worked throughout his career for polarizing lawmakers and officials, whose controversial views he has defended.
But Sen. Jon Tester (Mont.), the top Democrat on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs panel, defended Wilkie, saying at the time that the nominee is qualified and a “good guy.”
Wilkie previously ran military personnel policy at the Pentagon for the Trump administration before serving as acting VA secretary. He stepped down as acting VA secretary after being nominated for secretary.
The VA has been under the congressional microscope since a 2014 scandal that found department clinics across the country were manipulating data to downplay how long a veteran had been waiting for a health-care appointment.
The scandal toppled then-Secretary Eric Shinseki, who stepped down amid widespread criticism in May 2014.
As Trump’s new VA secretary, Wilkie will find himself at the center of a fight over privatization that spun out of the 2014 scandal.
“My commitment to you is I will oppose efforts to privatize,” Wilkie said, adding that while the VA should be “central” to veterans’ health care there was room for balance with private providers.
Shulkin’s ouster in March reignited speculation that the White House wanted to expand veterans’ access to private-sector health-care providers. Shulkin also blamed his firing on forces within the administration who he said are pushing hard for greater privatization.
—Updated at 9:39 p.m.
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