Ever since Donald Trump launched his campaign for president last summer, he has linked himself closely to the cause of veterans he believes have been mistreated by the federal government. Most recently, he has pledged to headline a high-profile fundraiser in Des Moines on behalf of the Wounded Warrior Project instead of attending a potentially crucial Republican debate on Thursday prior to the Iowa caucuses. Trump has scheduled his fundraiser to air opposite the Fox News-hosted debate.
According the Trump, the event has drawn the interest of at least two of his 2016 rivals (with Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum subsequently confirming their attendance), and threatens to seriously hamstring the ratings of the conservative cable news network, which he has been publicly hammering for months. The GOP front-runner has refused to participate in Thursday’s debate because he claims that the network and its host and moderator Megyn Kelly are biased against him.
RELATED: Trump foundation has given little to vets groups
But increased attention to Trump’s most recent gambit for veterans has renewed scrutiny of his record. A public relations manager for the Wounded Warrior Project told NBC News on Thursday that they were “not aware of any fundraising efforts on our behalf with Mr. Donald Trump.” Last month, when Trump faced a similar stand-off with a network (CNN) over whether to appear at a debate, he demanded that the network donate $5 million in ad revenue to wounded veterans or he wouldn’t show up. Ultimately, Trump appeared at the December 15 debate, and there is no record of any donation being made. “I don’t want to take the chance of hurting my campaign,” he told The Washington Post at the time.
Trump’s decision to draw veterans into the debate over debates has provoked angry rebukes from veterans (and some prominent conservatives) on social media and elsewhere:
Trump is doing nothing GOP has done for years. Using the military as a prop to fill the voters. Support during war, and not after.
— Michael Hargrove (@MichaelHargrov1) January 28, 2016
When Trump talks about veterans, he doesn't express respect for them as citizen-soldiers. Rather he condescends to them as supposed victims.
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) January 28, 2016
Wounded warrior and combat vet on the line: “If he [Trump] was such a military proponent, he wouldn’t have deferred three times …” #DLRS
— Dana Loesch (@DLoesch) January 27, 2016
“Let me put this in language Donald Trump understands,” said Jon Soltz, an Iraq War veteran and chairman of the progressive veterans group VoteVets.org, in a statement released to MSNBC. “You’re a loser. You’re a third-rate politician, who clearly doesn’t understand issues, and is so scared of Megyn Kelly exposing it that you’re looking to use veterans to protect you from facing her questions.”
This is not the first time Trump has rankled members of that community on the campaign trail.
The real estate mogul caused an uproar last July when he questioned whether Sen. John McCain, a military veteran and a former prisoner of war in Vietnam, was actually a hero. Last September, he appeared on board the USS Iowa, ostensibly to reveal his national security strategy if he were elected president, although he never did. He was hosted by an organization called Veterans for a Strong America, which sold tickets to the event priced as high as $1,000 apiece, and which appears to have been comprised of just one guy, rather than a viable group of veterans.
That same month, he was mocked for claiming in a new book that he “always felt that I was in the military” because he attended a rigorous military boarding school for five years as a youth. And the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA), which represents over 150,000 vets, has said recently they will refuse any donations from Trump.
Meanwhile, The New York Daily News has reportedly unearthed a letter Trump wrote in 1991, imploring the then-chairman of the New York State Assembly’s Committee on Cities, John Dearie, to crack down on disabled veterans working as vendors along Fifth Ave in Manhattan.
“I’m so popular, I can evict veterans from Fifth Avenue and it won’t hurt me in the polls!” https://t.co/6SzDcRf6Gz








