Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Another troubling precedent

- THE ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

When it comes to his medical records, presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders seems to have taken a cue from President Donald Trump’s handling of his financial records. Sanders, an independen­t senator from Vermont, is reneging on a vow to release his full health records after suffering a heart attack last year. Just as voters shouldn’t have allowed Trump to get away with scuttling the tradition of full financial disclosure by presidenti­al candidates, they shouldn’t let Sanders set this troublesom­e new precedent of medical secrecy.

Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy and other past presidents hid serious medical conditions from the public and generally got away with it, but times have changed. By Ronald Reagan’s time, the signs of dementia he displayed in office were considered a valid topic of discussion, for obvious reasons: A president’s health affects national security and can affect decision-making. If the health of the nation’s leader is in question, the public has a right to know.

Sanders, 78, was hospitaliz­ed in October for chest pains during a campaign event. Doctors inserted two stents to unblock an artery, a common procedure. But the campaign waited three days to let the public in on that relevant piece of candidate informatio­n.

When Sen. John McCain faced questions about his health, he released more than a thousand pages of medical records. Sanders has to date released only a few letters from doctors attesting to his health. This despite his vow back in October to release full medical records in the near future.

Or not. Two weeks ago, Sanders told NBC’s Chuck Todd that he has already released as much medical informatio­n as he intends to. “We have released as much documentat­ion as any other candidate,” said Sanders. When Todd came back with the obvious response that no other candidate has had a heart attack on the campaign trail, Sanders talked about how vigorously he’s campaignin­g. That’s an argument for more disclosure regarding a heart issue, not less.

It’s interestin­g how closely Sanders’ about-face away from transparen­cy mimics how Trump handled demands in 2016 to release his tax returns, as all other major presidenti­al candidates have for decades: He promised vaguely to do it at some unspecifie­d point in the future, then he eventually acknowledg­ed that he just wasn’t going to. Promise made, promise broken.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States