Not Married? Voted Wrong? No Care for You.
The VA’s quiet rollback of civil rights should alarm every American.
In January, the Trump administration issued an executive order under the banner of “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism.” Most of the media’s attention focused on its symbolic language, a cultural nod to religious conservatives and a signal to anti-trans activists.
But something more concrete, and more dangerous, happened beneath the surface.
According to The Guardian, the Department of Veterans Affairs has quietly removed key civil rights protections from its clinical staff bylaws. These changes now allow VA doctors, nurses, psychologists, and social workers to refuse care based on a patient’s political affiliation or marital status.
Let that sink in: A veteran who served their country could now walk into a VA clinic, ask for treatment, and be told no, not because of funding or eligibility, but because of how they vote, or because they’re unmarried.
According to VA Press Secretary Peter Kasperowicz, “All eligible veterans will always be welcome at VA and will always receive the benefits and services they’ve earned under the law… The rule changes are a mere ‘formality.’”
The VA referred to it as a “formality.” They claim nothing has changed. But in the law and in power, what’s written down always matters, and implementation has begun.
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These Two Protections? Universally Outrageous
Let’s start with the two categories at the center of media coverage: marital status and political affiliation.
The VA now allows individual staff, including doctors, therapists, and social workers, to deny care based on either, not because of medical capacity, but because of personal judgment.
And here’s the thing, neither category is ideological. Neither is controversial. But both are loaded with social meaning and now, moral judgment.
Being unmarried might mean you're 24 and recently discharged, still adjusting to civilian life. It might mean you lost your spouse while serving. You could be in a long-term partnership that hasn’t been legalized, or part of a queer relationship where marriage still comes with legal or cultural risks.
To suggest that someone is less worthy of care because they haven’t married or remarried isn’t policy. It’s punishment. It resurrects the language of suspicion: the untrustworthy bachelor, the immoral spinster.
But it’s more than outdated symbolism. For many people, being unmarried already carries an emotional cost. It can feel like a quiet personal failure, not because it is one, but because the culture has trained us to perceive it that way: we’re unlovable, incomplete, or socially off-script.
Now imagine that private pressure translated into public judgment, that feeling of not being enough becomes something far worse: an institutional reason to be denied care.
And then there’s political affiliation.
Veterans don’t swear an oath to a president. They swear to the Constitution. That distinction is not symbolic; it’s the bedrock of civilian control of the military. To allow VA staff to deny care based on how a veteran voted, whether they supported Biden, protested Trump, or criticized the administration, is to fundamentally betray the democratic values that service members commit to protect.
This isn’t healthcare. It’s a test of obedience.
The Real Policy Change Is Broader
The headlines focused on political affiliation and marital status, and rightly so. They’re glaring, indefensible on their face, and easy for the public to understand.
However, the truth is that those weren’t the only protections removed.
According to internal documents and follow-up reporting, the VA also stripped staff bylaws of references to sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, and other categories that typically appear in non-discrimination clauses.
Dr. Kenneth Kizer, a Clinton-era VA spokesperson, opined: “[These rules] seem to open the door to discrimination on the basis of anything that is not legally protected.”
The VA’s own patient rights statement — the one publicly posted at facilities — still promises that veterans will be treated fairly and without bias based on those very same categories. But now, the staff who provide that care are no longer bound by those standards in their governing bylaws.
One document says the right thing. The other allows for the opposite.
And the kicker? These changes were made without formal input from VA medical staff, violating accreditation norms in the process. The Joint Commission, the body that accredits healthcare institutions, requires staff involvement in bylaw changes. In many VA facilities, that didn’t happen.
This isn’t a “formality.” It’s a fundamental shift in how the government defines who deserves care.
Changes at the VA have had profound impacts. See some of our reporting here:
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Why the Media Might Be Playing It Smart
It’s tempting to wonder why the press isn’t shouting louder. Why aren’t headlines screaming about the removal of protections for LGBTQ+ veterans, or the potential denial of care based on national origin?
Maybe it’s fear. Maybe it’s the usual caution around anything labeled a culture war.
But maybe — and this is worth considering — some journalists know exactly what they’re doing.
Focusing on marital status and political affiliation might not be avoidance. It might be strategy.
These are the most universally indefensible pieces of the policy, which makes them the most effective wedges.
Start there, and you can build public consensus. Get people to agree that this is wrong in principle, then start pulling on the rest of the thread.
We may be giving the press more credit than it deserves, but it seems likely.
The VA as a Policy Sandbox
There’s a reason this started at the VA.
It’s federally controlled. Veterans can’t easily walk away. The public sees criticism of VA policy as unpatriotic. Additionally, the population is relatively small and politically divided, making it an ideal place to test something that might not fly anywhere else.
If you wanted to experiment with a morally filtered model of healthcare, one where your personal beliefs determine who you treat, this is where you’d start.
It’s bureaucracy as ideology. And if it works, if no one stops it?
You normalize it. You scale it. You expand it to Medicaid, Medicare, Title X, and school-based clinics. You embed the idea that conscience-based care isn’t just a personal right, but also a public policy.
What begins in the VA doesn’t end there.
The Christian Nationalist Blueprint
This isn’t just about healthcare policy. It’s about who counts as morally legitimate in America.
This is Christian nationalism in practice, not as a sermon, but as a system, a system where marriage means moral, straight means safe, Republican means welcome, and everything else is treated as suspect.
VoteVets articulates this clearly in a Bluesky post, stating: “This isn’t healthcare. It’s political purity tests for people who risked their lives for this country. It’s unethical, authoritarian, and every one of us should be outraged.”
Moreover, it also violates the very profession it claims to serve.
Every licensed clinician, from physicians to nurses to psychologists, takes an oath, either literal or professional, to do no harm and to treat patients based on need, not judgment. The American Medical Association’s Code of Ethics rejects discrimination based on identity or belief.
NYU medical ethics professor Dr. Arthur Caplan says: “What we typically tell people in healthcare is: ‘You keep your politics at home and take care of your patients.’ Those views aren’t relevant to caring for patients. So why would we put anyone at risk of losing care that way?”
This policy doesn’t just bypass that code. It invites providers to break it, with cover from the state.
You fracture the profession, replace care with criteria, and set up an unspoken conflict: do you follow your oath, or your employer’s politics?
That’s not medical ethics. That’s theological triage.
We’ve been cautioning about Christian nationalism for months. See some of our reporting here:
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The Final Warning
This is already policy, and if it’s allowed to stand unchallenged, underreported, and quietly accepted, there’s no reason it stays within the VA.
Once the idea takes root, that care can be denied based on “conscience,” that rights are negotiable, that ideological loyalty is a factor in treatment, it becomes that much easier to bring it to the rest of us.
They started with veterans because they could, but the end goal was never just the VA.
It’s about reshaping what we consider acceptable and who we believe deserves care.
Take Action
Call Your Elected Officials
Demand oversight and the full restoration of protections.
Congressional Switchboard: (202) 224-3121
You’ll be connected to your House or Senate office.
Sample script:
“Hi, my name is [Your Name], and I’m a constituent from [City/State]. I’m calling to demand that Congress investigate the recent VA policy changes that allow staff to deny care based on political affiliation, marital status, and other identity factors. This violates medical ethics and puts veterans at risk. Please speak out and push for full restoration of nondiscrimination protections in the VA system.”
Support These Groups:
VoteVets – votevets.org
Protect Democracy – protectdemocracy.org
American Medical Association – ama-assn.org
ACLU – aclu.org
Share This Story
Send it to a veteran. To a medical professional. To someone you love.
The most dangerous policies are the ones we’re told don’t matter.
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Bibliography:
Glantz, Aaron. “‘Extremely disturbing and unethical’: new rules allow VA doctors to refuse to treat Democrats, unmarried veterans.” The Guardian, June 16, 2025.
Brancolini, Janna. “VA Doctors Can Refuse to Treat Democrats After Trump Order.” The Daily Beast, June 16, 2025.
“VA Policy Change: US Doctors Can Question Veterans Whether They Attended Trump’s Rallies before Treatment?” The Economic Times, June 16, 2025.
“Defending Women From Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.” Presidential Executive Order 14168, January 20, 2025. Federal Register (90 FR 8615).
“The Department of Veterans Affairs Is Not O.K.” The New Yorker, June 12, 2025.
Has to be Over Stepping I would Hope. Another thing that Probably 80 percent of Americans don't Want. They are going after everything the Majority wants
If they can deny veterans access to healthcare based on their voting record, then why not deny Social Security and Medicare to Democrats, too? A big Democratic die-off is what they want.