The Day

TRUMP PLEDGES U.S. WILL BEAT OPIOID DRUG EPIDEMIC

White House reviewing report,which includes call for declaratio­n of national emergency

- By JENNA JOHNSON

Bedminster, N.J. — President Donald Trump took on the opioid drug epidemic Tuesday, pledging that “we will fight this deadly epidemic and the United States will win.”

Trump held a briefing on the matter at his private golf course in central New Jersey, where he is on a 17-day “working vacation.” Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, senior counselor Kellyanne Conway, senior adviser Jared Kushner and first lady Melania Trump were among the attendees.

The president did not announce any new policy, but vowed to work with health profession­als and law enforcemen­t on the crisis. He said federal drug prosecutio­ns have dropped but promised he would “be bringing them up rapidly.”

Bridgewate­r, N.J. — With the opioid crisis intensifyi­ng and dozens of Americans dying of drug overdoses each day, President Donald Trump pledged Tuesday to “beat this horrible situation” at a briefing held here during his 17-day “working vacation.”

“During my campaign, I promised to fight this battle because as president of the United States my greatest responsibi­lity is to protect the American people and to ensure their safety, especially in some parts of our country, it is horrible,” Trump told reporters before the event was closed to the press.

A White House spokesman described the briefing as simply “an update on the opioid crisis” and said that the president was still reviewing a preliminar­y report from a commission on the crisis that urgently recommende­d more than a week ago that he declare a national emergency.

During his campaign, the president promised he would swiftly end the crisis by building a wall along the southern U.S. border to stop the flow of heroin into the country, boosting funding for recovery programs and approachin­g the problem with a humanitari­an mind-set instead of a lawand-order one. In November’s election, Trump overperfor­med the most in counties with the highest drug, alcohol and suicide mortality rates, according to a Pennsylvan­ia State University study.

Now, more than 200 days into his presidency, activists say the president has done little to help.

Republican­s in Congress have proposed cutting Medicaid in ways that health-care advocates say would reduce access to drug treatment for many, and the president’s budget proposal calls for reducing funding for addiction treatment, research and prevention efforts. Several Republican lawmakers who did not vote for their party’s plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act earlier this summer said that the legislatio­n would make it more difficult for their states to combat the heroin epidemic.

In March, Trump establishe­d the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis, which is led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. The group was charged with studying “ways to combat and treat the scourge of drug abuse, addiction, and the opioid crisis.”

Last week, the commission issued a preliminar­y report that described the overdose death toll as “September 11th every three weeks” and urged the president to immediatel­y “declare a national emergency under either the Public Health Service Act or the Stafford Act.”

Doing so would allow the administra­tion to remove some barriers and waive some federal rules, such as one that restricts where Medicaid recipients can receive addiction treatment. It would also put pressure on Congress to provide more funding. But some advocates worry that it would also expand the powers of the president and attorney general in a way that could allow abuse of law enforcemen­t authority.

Declaring an emergency would allow the administra­tion to remove barriers and waive some federal rules, such as one that restricts where Medicaid recipients can receive addiction treatment. It would also put pressure on Congress to provide more funding.

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