It’s finally the end for Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki.
President Obama announced Friday morning that he accepted Shinseki’s resignation during a private meeting at the White House. VA Deputy Secretary Sloan Gibson will take over as interim secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Obama stressed that he was very reluctant to accept Shinseki’s resignation, but the departing VA chief was concerned about becoming a “distraction” from fixing the broken VA health care system. “It was Ric’s judgment, his belief that he would be a distraction from the task at hand” that led to this, Obama said.
“I said that we have to do better, and we will,” Obama said in a statement in the White House’s press briefing room.
Sloan and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Rob Nabors will work on addressing the needs of the 1,700 veterans who were left off the Phoenix VA system’s official waiting list. “At this stage what I want is somebody at the VA who is not spending time outside of solving problems for the veterans,” the president said.
Obama also said that he would leave decisions about any criminal wrongdoing to the Justice Department.
More than 100 lawmakers had called for Shinseki to step down by Thursday evening, including veterans in both the House and Senate. Rep. Tammy Duckworth, D-Illinois, a disabled Iraq war veteran and former VA official, became the most recent addition to the list on Friday.
Shinskei has been under fire since allegations surfaced in April that there were so-called “secret waiting lists” for veterans at the Phoenix VA, and that at least 40 veterans had died while waiting for primary care appointments.
In response, Shinseki ordered an investigation, and more than 200 staffers are in the process of auditing the entire VA system. He laid out his work on investigating and addressing problems in the system in an op-ed published Thursday in USA Today.
Until this week, the White House had avoided criticizing Shinseki too directly, although Press Secretary Jay Carney acknowledged that Obama found the Inspector General’s report “extremely troubling.” By Thursday evening, more than 10 Democratic Senators had joined Republicans in the House and Senate in calling for Shinseki to resign.
Shinseki is a retired four star Army general who served for 38 years. He lost part of his foot to a land mine while serving in Vietnam. Shinseki first became known as the general who predicted that the United States would need hundreds of thousands of troops to prop up post-invasion Iraq in 2003. While he was proven right, his congressional testimony on the subject effectively ended his military career.
During his tenure as VA secretary, he made combating homelessness among veterans a department priority.
In its report on scheduling at the Phoenix VA, the VA’s Office of the Inspector General admitted that the problems in the system were not of Shinseki’s making. “Since 2005, the VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) has issued 18 reports that identified, at both the national and local levels, deficiencies in scheduling resulting in lengthy waiting times and the negative impact on patient care,” the report read.









