The VA isn’t just a healthcare system. It’s a national promise that follows service members from the day they leave uniform through specialty care, benefits decisions, and finally a dignified burial with perpetual care. I sat down with the Honorable Dr. David J. Shulkin, the ninth Secretary of Veterans Affairs, to talk about what it’s like to carry that responsibility at scale and to lead through the kind of pressure most leaders never face.
We get into the VA wait time crisis and the leadership moves required to fix access fast, including why clear priorities beat endless consensus when delays can become life-or-death. Dr. Shulkin also shares the moment early in his VA tenure that changed how he saw the mission: some veterans need a system built for complex behavioral health, substance use treatment, rehabilitation, and service-connected injuries that the private sector often isn’t structured to handle. That’s why he argues against full VA privatization and for a hybrid model that protects VA expertise while using community care when it truly helps veterans.
We also tackle veterans benefits and disability claims, including why “fraud” is often a predictable outcome of a complex, adversarial process that forces veterans to prove what the government should already know. We talk DD214 barriers, classified service documentation, and why a unified DoD and VA electronic health record could remove huge friction for veterans navigating VA healthcare and VA benefits. Finally, we discuss public accountability, media transparency, leadership stability, and why memorial affairs is an overlooked part of what makes the VA unique.