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Ahead of Robert Wilkie’s likely confirmation to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, Trump loyalists at the agency are taking aggressive steps to purge or reassign staff members perceived to be disloyal to President Trump and his agenda for veterans, according to multiple people familiar with the moves.
Ahead of Robert Wilkie’s likely confirmation to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, Trump loyalists at the agency are taking aggressive steps to purge or reassign staff members perceived to be disloyal to President Trump and his agenda for veterans, according to multiple people familiar with the moves.
The
transfers include more than a dozen career civil servants who have been moved
from the leadership suite at VA headquarters and reassigned to lower-visibility
roles.
The employees served agency leaders, some dating back more than two
decades, in crucial support roles that help a new secretary.
None
said they were given reasons for their reassignments.
The
moves are being carried out by a small cadre of political appointees led by
Acting Secretary Peter O’Rourke who have consolidated power in the four months
since they helped oust Secretary David Shulkin.
The
reshuffling marks a new stage in a long estrangement between civil servants and
Trump loyalists at VA, where staff upheaval and sinking morale threatens to
derail service to one of the president’s key constituencies, according to
current and former employees.
Among
those reassigned is an experienced scheduler whom Wilkie told colleagues he
wanted to work for him once he is confirmed by the Senate, according to former
and current employees.
Other
career senior executives with institutional knowledge of VA’s troubled benefits
operation also have been sidelined, some to other cities, according to multiple
people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the issue’s
sensitivity. A high-ranking executive appointed during the Obama administration
to a six-year term quit last week after clashing with Trump aides. Even some
Trump appointees have been pushed out for challenging the leadership group.
VA
officials say the reassignments will help their efforts to improve the agency’s
overall culture and performance. Still, it is highly unusual for a leader in an
acting, caretaker role — which began for O’Rourke on May 30 — to make such
significant changes before a permanent leader arrives.
“Under
President Trump, VA won’t wait to take necessary action when it comes to improving
the department and its service to Veterans,” spokesman Curt Cashour said in an
email. Wilkie, according to Cashour and a spokeswoman for the nominee, has had
no hand in the changes as he awaits Senate confirmation.
Current
and former employees — and now alarmed members of Congress — call the
reshuffling a loyalty purge that is targeting the alleged political sympathies
of civil servants whose jobs are, by definition, nonpartisan.
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