The Oklahoman

Kenneth Frazier stepping down as Merck CEO

Frazier is one of only a handful of Black CEOs of major corporatio­ns

- By Nathan Bomey

Kenneth Frazier is stepping down as CEO of Merck in a shakeup for the pharmaceut­ical giant as the industry seeks to contribute solutions to the COVID-19 pandemic even as it faces bipartisan scrutiny over drug prices.

Frazier, who will be succeeded as CEO by the company's chief financial officer, will become executive chairman for an undetermin­ed period of time when the transition occurs at the end of June.

He joined Merck in 1992 as a vice president, became president of the company's Global Human Health Division in 2007 and was elevated to CEO and chairman in 2011.

Frazier is one of only a handful of Black CEOs of major corporatio­ns. Of the 279 top executives in the 50 biggest companies in the S&P 100, only five were Black as of an analysis conducted in 2020 by USA TODAY. “It has been a privilege to serve as Merck's CEO for the past decade and to work with the most dedicated and talented employees and management team in the industry,” Frazier said in a statement.

The Merck CEO notably quit then-President Donald Trump's manufactur­ing jobs council over Trump's response to the racist protests and violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, in August 2017.

“America's leaders must honor our fundamenta­l values by clearly rejecting expression­s of hatred, bigotry and group supremacy, which run counter to the American ideal that all people are created equal,” Frazier said at the time. “As CEO of Merck and as a matter of personal conscience, I feel a responsibi­lity to take a stand against intoleranc­e and extremism.”

Trump said Frazier had been an obstacle to lowering drug prices, a goal that has drawn bipartisan political support in Washington.

Frazier has said the pharmaceut­ical industry is able to deliver innovative new drugs because of the industry's profits.

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