Congress Moves to End VA Bureaucrats’ Power to Strip Gun Rights Without Due Process
America’s veterans scored a major victory for the Second Amendment after the U.S. House passed H.R. 1041, the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act, advancing legislation designed to stop unelected VA bureaucrats from placing veterans into the federal gun ban system without a court ruling.
The bill passed largely along party lines and would prohibit the Department of Veterans Affairs from reporting veterans to the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) simply because they were assigned a fiduciary to help manage financial benefits.
For years, gun rights advocates have blasted the VA’s policy as a blatant violation of due process, arguing that veterans were being stripped of their constitutional rights without ever being accused of a crime or declared dangerous by a judge.
An estimated 250,000 veterans have been affected by the policy.
Supporters backing the bill argued that the men and women who fought to defend the Constitution should not lose their freedoms because of an administrative decision made behind closed doors.
House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Mike Bost (R-IL) said veterans deserve the same due process protections afforded to every other American before losing a constitutional right.
Rep. Eli Crane (R-AZ) also condemned the current system, arguing that veterans have been wrongly labeled prohibited persons for decades simply for seeking assistance with benefits management.
Gun control groups and anti-gun Democrats opposed the measure, claiming the legislation would weaken what they describe as public safety protections.
But Second Amendment supporters counter that Constitutional rights cannot be erased through bureaucratic paperwork and that veterans should never be treated like second-class citizens after serving their country.
The legislation now heads to the U.S. Senate, where a companion bill already has support from dozens of Republican senators.
The House vote marks another sign that lawmakers are aggressively working to dismantle federal policies that punish law-abiding gun owners through administrative overreach rather than actual criminal convictions.
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