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WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) released the following statement today:

“Like most Americans, I am outraged about how our veterans are being treated. The preliminary Inspector General’s report shows this is a systemic problem that dates back many years. We have to fix the system now.

“The controversy over Gen. Shinseki's leadership has taken attention away from the real issue - the need for swift, decisive action to reform the VA, change its culture, and ensure that we provide quality, timely services for our veterans.

“Gen. Shinseki has served our country with distinction. I now believe he should step aside in order to allow our focus and our efforts to be on making the critically needed changes to fix the VA.

“No one has pushed the VA harder than me: we pressed them to broaden PTSD services for female veterans. We pushed them on the claims backlog. It took us more than a year to get the VA to adopt the William & Mary law school’s pro bono model, which helps veterans with some of the toughest disability claims.  That Virginia model is now being expanded to 15 other law schools across the country.

“It is important that we provide Virginia's veterans with the services they have earned - and which we as a nation have committed to provide.”

“A bipartisan group of U.S. senators on Thursday did what the American people have been wanting them to do: They tackled a major problem – one left over from the Great Recession of 2008 – and they agreed on a way to solve it,” The Christian Science Monitor reported in its coverage of yesterday’s 13-9 vote to approve bipartisan housing finance reform legislation.

Tracking every dollar

May 12 2014

There is one thing in Washington that everyone should be able to agree on, and that is we must improve how our government works. I’m happy to report the President has signed our bipartisan Digital Accountability and Transparency Act, or DATA Act into law.
"In late 2012, the White House identified 269 reports it would like to eliminate. The Dog and Cat Fur Protection report was on that list, along with a few other doozies...After the White House put out its list, the Senate’s Warner and Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) wrote bills to eliminate some of the least useful reports."