"The Most Anti-Veteran President in History"
Julia Conley for Common Dreams
Just as Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress were warned would happen, close to 100,000 US veterans are currently behind on their mortgage payments or are in the process of foreclosure as a result of the White House’s decision to shut down a Department of Veterans Affairs program that helped people with VA-backed home loans when they were behind on their monthly payments.As NPR reported Thursday, more than 10,000 have already lost
their homes, nearly a year after the Trump
administration abruptly did away with the VA Servicing Purchase (VASP)
program.
The program was rolled out during the Biden
administration, after the VA ended a pandemic-era assistance program that
had allowed VA home loan borrowers to gradually pay back mortgage payments that
they had needed to skip.
Under VASP, the VA purchases home loans that were in default
from mortgage services and then modified the loans.
In March 2025, a representative from the Mortgage Bankers
Association told the House Veterans Affairs Committee that widespread
foreclosures would result if the VASP program—which Republicans in
Congress said had been created by former President Joe Biden for
“political purposes... to undercut the VA Home Loan program—was not protected.
Despite the warning, the VASP program was halted two months
later.
Nearly a year after the program’s end, the VA is still
developing a replacement to help veterans—many of whom are struggling to afford
essentials just like the majority of other Americans as the cost of living
crisis intensifies with rising fuel prices due to Trump’s war on Iran.
Sources in the mortgage industry told NPR that many of the vets who have lost their homes so far had enough disability benefits or other income to avoid foreclosure, had the VASP program remained in operation.
NPR interviewed Leann Ledford, whose husband, a Marine
veteran who served in Afghanistan, has a brain injury, experiences seizures,
and suffers post-traumatic stress disorder. The family is one of tens of
thousands who learned in October 2022 that the Biden administration had ended
the earlier pandemic-era program and that they would have to pay a year’s worth
of back payments in one lump sum.
The Ledfords were also one of many veteran families who were
unable to enroll in VASP before Trump abruptly shut it down.
Ledford told NPR that with her husband’s $3,971 monthly
disability check, they could have afforded mortgage payments under the VASP
program.
Army veteran Jon Henry was also unable to enroll in VASP
before it was shut down, and was forced to take a modified loan with payments
that are $380 more per month than his original mortgage.
“It’s a struggle,” Henry told NPR. “Especially with
everything else being inflated in the country, you know, with groceries, gas …
I’m like, what the hell?”
NPR’s reporting led Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), an Iraq War veteran, to
denounced Trump as “the most anti-veteran president in history.”
When Trump’s new VA home loan assistance program is up and
running—which isn’t expected to happen for several more months, veterans will
be able to move their missed payments to the back of their loan term. But in
the current draft of the plan, reported NPR, “the VA is telling
mortgage companies that if a new, modified loan at a higher interest rate only
raises a veteran’s monthly payment by up to 15%, they must place vets into that more costly
loan.”
“So a veteran with a $2,000 monthly mortgage payment could
still be pushed into a modified loan that raises their payment by up to $300 a
month. And they wouldn’t be given the option of moving their missed payments to
the back of their loan and keeping their original, lower-cost mortgage,”
reported the outlet.
Pete Mills of the Mortgage Bankers Association told the VA last month that under Trump’s plan, “as drafted, veterans will continue to have worse options than similarly situated non-veterans.”
