WASHINGTON — There were moments during President Trump’s address on prescription drug prices on Friday that had Republican lawmakers in attendance bursting into applause and even rising from their seats. The president’s jab at the pharmaceutical lobby, however, was not one of them.
From left, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer in the Rose Garden following President Trump’s address on drug prices.
Many of the lawmakers who were present are in fact at the center of the pharmaceutical industry’s efforts to lobby Congress. Those invited by the White House included Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), a longtime industry ally who chairs the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees Medicare. Also invited were two other lawmakers regularly courted by the drug industry: Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas), who chairs the Energy and Commerce Committee’s health panel, and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), whose Obamacare repeal bill in September nearly passed the Senate.
The companies and trade groups paying for the lobbying operations also donate heavily to the same lawmakers’ re-election campaigns.
A STAT review of four of those lawmakers’ campaign finance disclosures — Hatch, Burgess, Cassidy, and Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.) — showed they have taken in a combined sum of more than $300,000 from drug manufacturers and affiliated lobbying groups in the 2018 campaign cycle, despite the fact that one is retiring and another wouldn’t be up for reelection until 2020.
“We’re going to take on one of the biggest obstacles to affordable medicine: the tangled web of special interests,” Trump said on Friday. “Not too many are sitting here today. They used to be here all the time. The drug lobby is making an absolute fortune at the expense of American consumers.”