Lodi News-Sentinel

Health nominee paid big from drug industry time

- By Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON — Newly disclosed financial records show that President Donald Trump’s nominee to become Health and Human Services secretary reaped big earnings during his tenure as a top pharmaceut­ical executive.

As a top drug industry veteran from 2007 to 2017, former Eli Lilly and Co. executive Alex Azar built a substantia­l financial portfolio now worth $9.5 million to $20.6 million, and he was paid nearly $2 million in his final year at the company.

Azar was a former general counsel and deputy secretary at HHS during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion. If confirmed, he would replace Tom Price, who resigned under pressure after using private charter flights at taxpayer expense.

In remarks Monday before a Cabinet meeting at the White House, Trump said he was “proud” of Azar’s nomination and urged the Senate to “swiftly confirm” him, citing the nominee just before a discussion of the national opioid epidemic.

Azar oversaw Eli Lilly’s lobbying of the federal government during a sensitive twoyear period when the pharmaceut­ical firm was under investigat­ion by the Justice Department for improperly marketing a medication used for schizophre­nia.

From 2007 to 2009, when Azar worked as a senior vice president in charge of corporate affairs and communicat­ions, Eli Lilly’s lobbying of federal officials and Congress surged. The firm’s payments for internal and outside lobbying rose from $4.2 million in 2007 to $12.4 million in 2008 and $11.2 million in 2009 as President Barack Obama’s administra­tion steered his health care program into law.

In January 2009, the Indianapol­is-based Eli Lilly settled with the Justice Department, agreeing to pay $1.4 billion to the government and to several states for improper marketing of Zyprexa, a schizophre­nia medication that was marketed for other nonauthori­zed uses.

During 2007 and 2009, Eli Lilly’s lobbyists at times contacted Justice Department officials as part of their work on behalf of the pharmaceut­ical firm. Congressio­nal lobbying disclosure­s do not indicate whether the contacts included any discussion­s of the thenpendin­g federal investigat­ion.

Azar’s compensati­on at Lilly during that period was not provided in the 22-page financial disclosure filed Friday with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics. But his final year’s earnings showed how far his drug industry work had catapulted Azar’s financial worth far beyond the $160,000 annual salary he earned as HHS general counsel in the early 2000s.

In addition to the $2 million he earned in 2016, Azar also was given a $1.6 million severance and sold off more than $3.4 million in Eli Lilly stock, noting in his disclosure: “I no longer hold any Eli Lilly & Co. stock.” He also declared between $100,000 and $1 million in capital gains from the sales along with millions more in stock and bond holdings.

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