GOP Scrambles to Fill Veterans' Shortfall
SUZANNE GAMBOA
Associated Press Writer
July 16, 2005
Fellow Republicans warned House Speaker Dennis
Hastert and Majority Leader Tom DeLay more than a year ago that the
government would come up short — by at least $750 million — for
veterans' health care. The leaders' response: Fire the messengers.
Now that the Bush administration has
acknowledged a shortfall of at least $1.2 billion, embarrassed
Republicans are scrambling to fill the gap. Meanwhile, Democrats
portray the problem as another example of the GOP and the White House
taking a shortsighted approach to the cost of wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan and criticize their commitment to the troops.
New Jersey Rep. Chris Smith, as chairman of
the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, had told the House GOP
leadership that the Veterans Affairs Department needed at least $2.5
billion more in its budget. The Senate passed a bill with that
increase; the House's bill was $750 million short.
Smith and 30 other Republicans wrote to their
leaders in March 2004 to make the point that lawmakers who were not the
usual outspoken advocates for veterans were troubled by the move.
Failure to come up with the additional $2.5 billion, they contended,
could mean higher co-payments and "rationing of health care services,
leading to long waiting times or other equally unacceptable reductions
in services to veterans."
Still, the House ignored them.
Smith was rebuked by several Republicans for
sounding the spending alarm, and House leaders yanked his chairmanship
in January. Rep. Rob Simmons, R-Conn., lost his chairmanship of the VA
health subcommittee, and Rep. Rick Renzi, R-Ariz., is no longer on the
committee. They too had signed the letters to Hastert, R-Ill., and
DeLay, R-Texas.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Smith refused to blame House leaders or discuss his firing.