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Chairman Bost for the Daily Caller: Time To Restore Veterans’ Constitutional Rights

This week, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Chairman Mike Bost (R-Ill.), published the below opinion piece in the Daily Caller to discuss Republicans’ plan to cement the constitutional rights of veterans with fiduciaries through HR 1041, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, which Chairman Bost introduced earlier this year alongside Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Chairman Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Subcommittee on Disability Assistance & Memorial Affairs Chairman Rep. Morgan Luttrell (R-Texas), and Senator John Kennedy (R-La.).

The Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act would ensure that no Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) bureaucrat can strip a veteran with a fiduciary of their right to bear arms without a judge or court ruling first that the veteran is a danger to themselves or their community.

Under current law, and since 1993, a veteran who needs assistance managing their finances and VA benefits because of a disability – without an additional finding by a court of law or any medical professional that the veteran may be a danger to themselves or others – is immediately reported to the FBI’s NICS list and stripped of their Second Amendment right to legally purchase and own a firearm. The FY 2024 MilCon/VA Appropriations bill, and the subsequent two continuing resolutions, ended this practice on a temporary basis to afford veterans with fiduciaries the due process rights they fought to protect. However, the temporary policy expired on March 14, 2025, without a permanent legislative fix in place. In January, the Subcommittee on Disability Assistance & Memorial Affairs held a hearing on this issue. To learn more about the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, click here. Bill text can be found here.

Time To Restore Veterans’ Constitutional Rights
By Rep. Mike Bost, R-Ill.

The Constitution guarantees all Americans – regardless of their race, status, or creed – fundamental freedoms that shape our way of life. That includes the right to bear arms to protect ourselves and our families. But for too long, hundreds of thousands of veterans have wrongfully been discriminated against simply because they have fiduciaries to help them manage their finances. For decades those veterans have been automatically reported to the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) list with zero evidence whatsoever that they are a danger to themselves or others. Even criminals receive due process in a court of law before they are reported to the NICS list. Yet, veterans have been treated worse than criminals simply because of their financial situation.

Under current law, a veteran who needs assistance managing their finances and VA benefits because of a disability – without any additional finding by a court of law or any medical professional that the veteran may be dangerous – is reported by a VA bureaucrat to the FBI’s NICS list and stripped of their Second Amendment rights. Although the FY 2024 MilCon/VA Appropriations bill and subsequent Continuing Resolutions ended this practice temporarily, veterans deserve a permanent fix. As a gun owner, veteran, hunter, and most importantly, an American, this unjust practice has disturbed me since I came to Congress over ten years ago. Why should veterans – the men and women who fought to defend the Constitutional rights of every American – be treated like second-class citizens when it comes to their own rights?

It is important to understand that VA strips disabled veterans of their Constitutional right to bear arms without ever considering whether they are suicidal, homicidal, or a threat to their community. VA’s practice stigmatizes and discriminates against the disabled veteran community. We simply cannot assume anyone with a disability is automatically dangerous. There is also zero data to support the idea that a veteran who is unable to manage their finances because of a disability is automatically dangerous. But the current law suggests otherwise – it’s time to change that for good.

I, alongside my House and Senate Republican colleagues, am leading H.R. 1041, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, to make clear first that this practice towards veterans with fiduciaries is discriminatory and wrong, and second, that a veteran’s Constitutional right to bear arms should only be lost after they have received due process in a court of law. Should a veteran with a fiduciary lose their Second Amendment rights, a judge –should make that decision – with evidence to back it up – not a VA bureaucrat. My bill is in response to all the veterans who have told me that VA’s NICS reporting practice is the reason why they won’t go to VA for care or earned benefits. I’m focused on breaking down barriers to care, not creating more of them. The Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act would permanently ensure that all veterans receive the same due process rights as every other American.

In every other State and Federal legal system, civilians and criminals must be proven dangerous by a judge based on evidence before they are stripped of their Constitutional right to defend themselves – veterans should not be treated any differently. If a veteran with a financial advisor wants to hunt with their grandson or protect their property, they should be able to. My bill would make that abundantly clear to safeguard the rights our men and women in uniform have given their lives in defense of – so let’s fulfill that promise.

Rep. Mike Bost, R-Ill., is a Marine Corps veteran and serves as the Chairman of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.
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