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Sarah Silbiger /POOL/AFP via Getty Images
The Senate voted 87-7 on Monday to confirm President Biden’s pick, Denis McDonough, to serve as Veterans Affairs secretary, making him only the second non-veteran to lead the troubled department.
While McDonough did not serve in the armed forces, the 51-year-old is a veteran public servant. He was President Barack Obama’s chief of staff, a position he assumed in February 2013. Before that he served as the deputy national security advisor and as the chief of staff of the national security staff and as the deputy national security advisor for strategic communications.
As head of the VA, McDonough is inheriting the formidable task of overseeing the administration of COVID-19 vaccines to many of the 18 million veterans across the nation.
During his confirmation hearing last month, McDonough told the Senate that he’s been directed by Biden “to focus on getting our veterans through this pandemic.”
He is also taking over the behemoth agency — the largest integrated health care system in the U.S. — as it faces a long list of problems that have plagued the department for years.
Among its failures, the VA has come under investigation for excessively long wait times for veterans seeking medical care then falsifying records to cover up the delays. And it’s long been criticized for its labyrinthine benefits claims process. Additionally, former VA Secretary David Shulkin was embroiled in a scandal involving improper spending of funds, directing subordinates to perform personal duties and improperly accepting gifts.
McDonough told the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee that he would apply “his deep and extensive knowledge of government” to overhauling the department.
“This won’t be easy. The Department of Veterans Affairs faces great challenges, challenges made even more daunting by the coronavirus pandemic. Its capabilities have not always risen to the needs of our veterans,” he said.
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