Big Pharma Flooding Airwaves With Disinformation to Kill Drug Price Reform
While its thousands of lobbyists work fervently on Capitol Hill, the pharmaceutical industry is flooding the airwaves in several states with deceptive ads in a last-ditch campaign to block Senate Democrats’ plan to curb the unchecked pricing power of drug corporations.
Included as part of a reconciliation package negotiated by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), the proposal would require Medicare to negotiate the prices of a small number of drugs directly with pharmaceutical companies, which can currently drive up costs as they please—boosting their profits at the expense of patients.
The measure would also cap out-of-pocket medicine costs at $2,000 a year for recipients of Medicare Part D, the prescription drug benefit provided through private plans approved by the federal government.
The drug industry—which has repeatedly fought off price regulation attempts in recent decades—has lashed out furiously against Democrats’ plan, even though it is in some ways significantly weaker than a proposal that the House passed last year. Republicans bankrolled by Big Pharma are also working to tank the bill.
Roll Call reported Friday that the “Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), the National Association of Manufacturers, and a group called American Commitment have collectively spent millions of dollars on ads in July” to attack Democrats’ proposal, key parts of which are overwhelmingly popular with the American public.
“We’re going to use every tool in the toolbox to relentlessly educate lawmakers about the flaws in this bill,” declared Stephen Ubl, president of PhRMA, the nation’s leading drug industry trade group.
American Commitment, a nonprofit with ties to the Koch Brothers, launched a new seven-figure ad buy on Thursday, targeting audiences in Washington, D.C. as well as West Virginia, Nevada, and Georgia.
The ads, which can be viewed in full on American Commitment’s website, recycle the false and repeatedly debunked claim that Democrats’ bill would cut “nearly $300 billion from Medicare,” distorting the Congressional Budget Office’s estimate that the legislation would save the federal government roughly $290 billion over ten years.
“We are inches from the goal line,” David Mitchell, the founder of Patients for Affordable Drugs, tweeted Friday. “We aim to pass reforms to lower Rx prices in the coming days and curb pharma’s power to dictate prices to Americans. Let’s see it through.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org.