Trump's Trials - Trump's VA killed a home loan program. Vets are now losing their homes because of it
Episode Date: April 2, 2026More than 10,000 veterans lost their homes to foreclosure since May of last year, when the Trump administration shut down a key safety net in the VA home loan program. NPR's Chris Arnold and Quil Lawr...ence share their reporting.Support NPR and hear every episode of Trump's Terms sponsor-free with NPR+. Sign up at plus.npr.org.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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You're listening to Trump's terms. I'm Scott Detrow.
President Trump promised every single American that he would make America safe again.
Every single day in the Oval Office, the president looks at us and says, why haven't we done more?
This would be an entirely different country in a short period of time.
Every episode, we bring you one story from NPR's recent coverage of the 47th president.
With a focus on ways his administration is pushing the boundaries of presidential power.
Here's the latest from NPR.
From NPR news, I'm Stevenskeep in Washington, D.C.
We have an update on an NPR investigation that began three years ago and exposed a debacle at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
The VA put thousands of veterans at risk of home foreclosures through no fault of their own.
The problem started under the Biden administration, and the Biden administration rolled out a program to fix it.
Then, President Trump killed that program despite warnings that killing it would cause veterans to lose their homes.
Now, veterans are losing their homes.
NPR's Chris Arnold and Quill Lawrence report.
More than 10,000 veterans have lost their homes in foreclosure sales since Trump's VA, with no warning, shut down that program last May.
That's the highest level in a decade, according to industry data.
Leanne Ledford is one of them.
The hardest thing for her is that she's been here before.
fought her way out. When you lose your home, your house, like nothing else matters.
Ledford's husband was hurt in Afghanistan. He is PTSD and a brain injury. But it took a long time for the VA
to approve his disability pay. And back in 2018, his condition got so bad that he couldn't work.
Obviously, I can't just leave my husband at home. If he's having, you know, at first we didn't know
whether it was a stroke or a seizure or what was going on. So they were both out of work with a young
kid, soon they couldn't afford rent.
So we had to use the last bit of our savings and cash out our retirement and buy a travel
trailer and trade in my Jeep for a truck.
They hitched that camper to their truck and lived out of it for six months.
But then they managed to get back on their feet.
And by 2021, they bought a house with a VA home loan.
That's just what the VA loan is supposed to do, give veterans a leg up into the middle
class and home ownership.
But then thousands of vets found themselves trapped by a series of middle.
steps by the Department of Veterans Affairs. And that has now pushed the Ledford's to the brink of
eviction. We didn't know that the foreclosure sale went through until somebody knocked on the front
door. The mortgage industry warned the Trump administration this was going to happen. The crisis
started in 2022 when the Biden administration abruptly ended a COVID-era mortgage relief program.
That's what trapped the Ledford's and lots of other vets. The Biden VA took two years to fix the
problem. But once the fix was finally up and running, a program called VASP, it started saving the homes of
large numbers of veterans. Yeah, VASP gave 33,000 vets affordable, low interest rate loans. But some Republicans
at Congress thought that the program cost too much and they wanted to kill it and replace it.
The mortgage industry back then was basically warning, please God, don't kill this VASP program
before you actually do replace it with something different. Without VASP,
VA would have foreclosed on tens of thousands of borrowers.
That was Elizabeth Balsay of the Mortgage Bankers Association at a congressional hearing in March of last year.
She was asked what would happen if VA scuttled the VASP program.
Foreclosure.
I mean, that's the short answer's foreclosure.
And now that's what's happening because Trump's VA shut down VASP anyway.
It's hard to say just how many of those 10,000 vets who lost their home to foreclosure could have been helped by the VAS program.
And some, like the Ledford's, could have afforded to keep their homes if the program had survived.
But their lender didn't get them into the program by the time it got closed to any more vets.
And now it's too late.
Leah and Ledford says her husband's PTSD symptoms had improved after they bought this house.
Now he's having seizures again.
Even talking about losing this house is stressed him out so much that he asked not to record an interview.
I haven't seen him struggle this bad in years since the first time.
He started having seizures and new health issues from his traumatic brain injury.
In a written statement, the VA said, quote,
VA worked tirelessly with the Ledford family to help keep them in their home.
However, they were nearly four years behind on their mortgage payment.
What the VA didn't mention is that many families like the Ledford's
weren't permitted to make mortgage payments,
sometimes for years after the VA trapped them in a bureaucratic quagmire.
It all started after the pandemic hit the U.S. economy.
homeowners were offered what's called a forbearance. That's a pause in your mortgage payments, and
thousands of veterans took it. You know, we weren't getting out of our payments. It was just a pause.
It felt like such a relief for us. But this is where things first went off the rails. Four years ago,
the Biden VA turned off a repayment program that was part of that forbearance, and veteran families,
like the Ledford's, were stuck with a terrible choice. Again, they were not allowed to resume making the regular
monthly mortgage payments unless they first paid back all the missed payments.
That's tens of thousands of dollars do all at once.
There was one other option.
They could basically refinance, but mortgage rates had jumped from 3% to 7%.
So the Ledford's couldn't afford any of those options.
And many vets who did take that refi option, they got hit with punishingly higher monthly
payments.
Gulf War vet John Henry saw his payment go up $380 a month.
And it's like, what the?
hell, you know, with groceries, gas, and everything else, with all that being inflated.
And it's like, this is ridiculous.
Same thing with Afghanistan vet Chante Benfado.
I mean, that's dire.
It hurts paying $3,200 a month.
Jerome Thomas and Air Force veteran got stuck in a new loan that doubled his interest rate for
his family of five and raised their monthly payment by $800.
I don't have the means to.
afford that much money.
You know, I got my three kids in here.
I got, you know, the wife, she's a teacher.
And here's the thing to understand.
All these vets were hoping to get into VASP, the program meant to fix this whole mess.
But when the Trump administration killed it and didn't replace it with anything, they were stranded.
Now, nearly a year later, VA has finally just released a draft of its new program.
But VA says that won't be up and running until June.
And vets are losing their homes right now.
Meanwhile, mortgage industry groups say that the draft of the VA's new program would still leave many veterans worse off than people who never served.
And lawmakers agree that the program still needs work.
The new program won't do anything to help any of the vets you heard from in this story.
It's already too late for them, including the Ledford's.
You can't stabilize in life if you don't have, like, a stable home.
The VA said in a statement that it helped thousands of vets to avoid foreclosure.
but it didn't offer specifics.
VA said it stands ready to assist the Ledford's with health care services as needed.
They've been asked to vacate their home by April 3rd.
That's tomorrow.
Chris Arnold and Quill Lawrence, NPR News.
Before we wrap up a reminder, you can find more coverage of the Trump administration
on the NPR Politics Podcast, where you can hear NPR's political reporters
break down the day's biggest political news with new episodes every weekday afternoon.
And thanks, as always, to our NPR Plus supporters who hear every episode of the show without sponsor messages.
You can learn more at plus.npr.org.
I'm Scott Detrow.
Thanks for listening to Trump's Terms from NPR.
