HR-6755-119
Committee Hearings Held
Sponsored by Nancy Mace (R-SC)
What it does
This bill would make three changes to how the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) fills leadership positions. First, it would double the share of Senior Executive Service positions at the VA that can be filled by noncareer (political) appointees, from 5% to 10%. Second, it would restore Senate confirmation requirements for the Under Secretary for Health and the Under Secretary for Benefits — two of the VA's most senior officials — by requiring the President to nominate and the Senate to confirm both positions.
Who benefits
Veterans who receive VA health care and benefits, if the changes produce more responsive or accountable leadership. The President and the executive branch, which would gain greater flexibility to place politically aligned officials in senior VA roles. Senators, who would regain formal confirmation authority over two high-ranking VA positions. Political appointees who may now be eligible for a broader set of senior VA roles.
Who is hurt
Career civil servants currently in or competing for Senior Executive Service positions at the VA, who would face a larger pool of noncareer competitors for those roles. VA employees and veterans' service organizations that prefer continuity and subject-matter expertise in senior leadership, which career appointments tend to provide. Candidates for Under Secretary for Health or Under Secretary for Benefits who might be appointed more quickly under a process without Senate confirmation, since the confirmation process can be lengthy or stalled.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current 5% cap on noncareer VA executives insulates senior leadership from democratic accountability, allowing entrenched bureaucratic interests to resist policy direction from elected officials. They contend that restoring Senate confirmation for the Under Secretaries for Health and Benefits — a requirement that was removed in prior legislation — returns meaningful congressional oversight to two positions that oversee the largest integrated health care system in the country and billions of dollars in veterans' benefits annually.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that doubling the noncareer appointee cap would replace experienced, nonpartisan professionals with politically motivated officials who may lack the specialized expertise needed to manage a complex health care and benefits system serving over 9 million enrolled veterans. They contend that while Senate confirmation adds a check on the President, the combination of more political appointees and a confirmation process that can be weaponized for delay may produce leadership vacuums that directly harm veterans waiting for care or benefits decisions.