VA Secretary Doug Collins testifies under sharp Democratic questioning at House Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing on VHA reorganization.
VA Secretary Doug Collins testifies under sharp Democratic questioning at House Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing on VHA reorganization.
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VA secretary faces sharp Democratic questions over details of Veterans Health Administration reorganization

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Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins testified to the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs on Feb. 11, 2026, about a proposal to reorganize the Veterans Health Administration, drawing pointed questions from Democrats about what the changes would mean in practice.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins appeared before the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, to explain a proposed reorganization of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) that the department says is intended to reduce bureaucracy and streamline decision-making.

NPR reported that the hearing was Collins’ second appearance before a House committee during President Trump’s current administration, and that the session featured clashes with Democrats over details of the reorganization plan.

The hearing is listed on Congress.gov as “Opportunities with VHA Reorganization” and identifies Collins as a witness, alongside senior VHA officials, including Under Secretary for Health John Bartrum. The congressional listing places the hearing in the Cannon House Office Building in Washington.

Beyond those basic facts, NPR’s brief published item does not provide specifics about which provisions Democrats objected to, what Collins said in response, or a detailed timeline for the reorganization.

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Reactions on X to VA Secretary Doug Collins' February 11, 2026, testimony before the House Veterans' Affairs Committee on the Veterans Health Administration reorganization are divided. House Democrats criticized it as a rushed, half-baked scheme and third attempt to dismantle VA services, potentially risking veteran care. Representative Delia Ramirez accused Collins of violating his oath by failing to ensure veterans' benefits. Secretary Collins defended the plan as placing the right leaders effectively. Nonpartisan veterans' groups noted it as the first major VHA reorganization in 30 years aimed at streamlining and empowering local decisions.

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Homeless veterans waiting outside the West Los Angeles VA campus, illustrating the delay in housing initiatives.
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A year after Trump’s order to house 6,000 homeless veterans in West L.A., budget request funds no new beds, advocates say

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About a year after President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Veterans Affairs to restore capacity to house up to 6,000 homeless veterans at the VA’s West Los Angeles campus by 2028, advocates and some lawmakers say the administration has disclosed few details and that the latest budget request does not fund any new beds there.

Federal prosecutors in Washington have charged John Windom, 64, a former Department of Veterans Affairs senior executive who previously led the agency’s electronic health records modernization office, with concealing gifts and making false statements tied to benefits he allegedly received from contractors working on the VA project. Windom is accused of failing to disclose thousands of dollars in cash, casino chips, gift cards and other items between 2017 and 2021; his initial court appearance is scheduled for April 14, the Justice Department said.

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Congress restored billions in federal research funding earlier in 2026 after cuts proposed by the Trump administration. Watchdogs and former NIH officials now claim the administration is using new tactics to delay or withhold the money. Scientists report severe impacts on their work, including layoffs and halted projects.

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የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
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