Donald Trump has betrayed veterans — again
When I think back to the weeks and months immediately following my return home from a deployment to Afghanistan in 2012, my most visceral memory is of a constant feeling of a sort of stunned bewilderment. It was a disorientation born, in part, from the rapid return to civilian, peacetime life but also from the pervasive sense of indifference and disinterest I felt from my fellow citizens despite what American service members were enduring in their name half a world away.
Still, if you had told me then that a draft-dodging New York billionaire could denigrate the service of any veteran and be twice elected to the presidency, I would never have believed you.
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The cavalcade of depravity that is the first month of President Trump’s second presidency has been effective in obscuring the discrete harms done to different constituencies by the MAGA movement’s efforts to remake the state in a manner maximally offensive to its political opposition. Among those most immediately feeling the deleterious effects of billionaire stormtrooper Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) rapacious assault on the federal government are America’s veterans, that class of citizen so often lauded in poetic terms in our public discourse when institutions find it convenient and self-serving to do so.
Along with USAID, veterans’ services were among the
first items on the chopping block. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), which has long
fallen short of its hiring goals, announced last week that it would cut 1,000 employees. A VA
press release defended the firings as “part of a government-wide Trump administration effort to make agencies more efficient, effective and responsive to the American People.” In reality, the effort is part of a thinly veiled
campaign to expand the president’s powers by replacing career civil servants with political appointees loyal to the administration rather than the institutional mission.
The purge comes at the expense of the over
9 million veterans enrolled in Veterans Health Administration (VHA), part of the VA. Already, VA caregivers are
reporting decreased morale and outright “chaos” at the agency as a result of staffing cutbacks. These cuts
included workers responsible for staffing the veterans crisis line, a resource for former service members undergoing acute mental health crises. In a system plagued by long wait times — particularly for behavioral health
services to a population with a
suicide rate almost 60% higher than the general population — the decrease in workforce promises to only exacerbate existing access issues.
The Trump administration’s betrayal of veterans goes beyond access to services, however. Much maligned on the right, the diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives now being gleefully dismantled at the president’s behest have long been a
crucial vehicle for increasing veteran representation in the public sector.
DEI programs and affinity groups related to military service for federal workers have been banned. The efficacy of these programs in securing government employment for former servicemembers is difficult to overstate. As of 2023, a full
30% of the federal workforce were veterans compared to
6% of the civilian workforce. The mass firings of government workers disproportionately impact veterans by the very nature of the workforce’s composition. Stories
abound from veterans
terminated across the government, often via
boilerplate emails vaguely citing performance issues.
Republicans once liked to be seen as supportive of veterans, but Trump has ensured that's no longer the case, writes Andrew Carleen. Since Jan. 20, his administration has shown a cruel and shameful disregard for veterans and the federal programs created to support them -- in combat, and once...
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