As the national debt ceiling negotiations in Washington reached a fever pitch again this year, health care for veterans took center stage. In an effort to curb the soaring $31 trillion in U.S. debt, last month House Republicans passed a bill along partisan lines, 217-215, to cut 22 percent from the Department of Veterans Affairs budget. While their message was clear that money alone doesn’t necessarily fix problems in bloated bureaucracies, the bill probably can’t pass the Senate, let alone overcome a White House veto. Yet there’s one recently introduced piece of bipartisan legislation that helps veterans on health care and has a much better chance of becoming law. Earlier this mon
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