Defending VA Veterans Health Care on D-Day
Thousands of veterans mobilize to oppose the gutting of direct care and the move toward privatization.
by Suzanne Gordon, Steve Early June 11, 2025
The D-Day anniversary on June 6 is a pretty irresistible date for scheduling a protest related to veteran benefits. Eighty-one years ago, American soldiers and their allies stormed ashore in Normandy, establishing a critical beachhead in the military campaign to defeat Adolph Hitler and Nazism.
In World War IIs aftermath, hundreds of thousands of injured veterans were treated back home in a nationwide network of hospitals run by the federal government. Since then, the VA health care system has greatly expanded, and now through the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) provides high-quality care to nine million veterans. The majority of those veterans want to see the VHA improved and even expanded.
However, during the first Trump administration, the White House and a bipartisan coalition in Congress decided that veterans health care delivery needed to shift to the private sector. After passage of the VA MISSION Act of 2018, Trumps second VA Secretary, Robert Wilkiea right-wing southern Republicanclaimed that partial VHA privatization would produce more patient satisfaction and predictability, more efficiency for our clinicians, and better value for taxpayers.
Using D-Day as a protest peg six years ago, a few veterans and their caregivers challenged this view. Members of the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), National Nurses United (NNU), and Veterans for Peace (VFP) staged a National Day to Save The VA from privatization. That resulted in modest rallies, press conferences, or informational picketing in only a dozen locations, because the grassroots effort drew little or no support from major veterans organizations, the national AFL-CIO, or big-name politicians.
https://prospect.org/health/2025-06-11-veterans-protest-d-day-anniversary-VA/