Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Formula shortage offers GOP new attack strategy

Blaming Biden for issue seen as way to influence voters

- By Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, Texas — Republican­s aiming to retake control of Congress have already sharpened a message centering around blaming Democrats for high inflation, expensive gas, migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border and violent crime in some cities.

But GOP leaders landed on an issue last week that it hopes could prove even more potent: tying President Joe Biden to a shortage in baby formula.

Parents are suddenly running into bare supermarke­t and pharmacy shelves in part because of ongoing supply disruption­s and a recent safety recall. But in an election year that was already shaping up to be rocky for Democrats, Republican­s sense that the shortage could prove to be an especially tangible way to argue that Biden is incapable of quickly solving problems confrontin­g the U.S.

“This is not a Third World country,” said GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, the chair of the House

Republican conference. “This should never happen in the United States of America.”

The administra­tion has sometimes been slow in responding to sudden political threats, perhaps most notably when signs of inflation began to surface last year. The White House appears determined not to repeat that mistake, announcing Friday that formula maker Abbott Laboratori­es committed to give rebates through August for a food stamp-like program that helps women, infants and children.

Asked if his administra­tion had responded as quickly as it should have, Biden said, “If we’d been better mind readers, I guess we could’ve. But we moved as quickly as the problem became apparent.”

The defense by the White House illustrate­s how finger-pointing at the Biden administra­tion has already spread far and wide among Republican­s in Washington, on television and on social media. It’s a new issue for the GOP to hammer at and a way to address families at a time when Democrats believe outrage over the U.S. Supreme Court possibly ending the right to an abortion could galvanize women and other key voters, and blunt a Republican wave in November.

The full-court press by Republican­s included linking the formula shortage with the rising number of migrants coming into the U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack, R-Florida, shared an image Thursday of a shelving unit at a U.S. Border Patrol facility in Texas containing four boxes full of baby formula containers and a half-dozen more formula containers.

Cammack said a border patrol agent sent her the image. The AP has not independen­tly verified the photo’s authentici­ty or when exactly it was captured. Some conservati­ve pundits and news outlets have since spun even greater tall tales from the photo, with some claiming that they show Biden is shipping “thousands” of pallets of baby formula to the border.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the Border Patrol is “following the law” that requires the government to provide adequate food, specifical­ly formula for children under the age of one, detained at the border.

In Washington, lawmakers are responding to the shortage by scheduling hearings and demanding

informatio­n from the FDA and formula makers as part of sweeping investigat­ions. Democratic leaders of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform wrote formula makers seeking informatio­n that includes what steps they are taking to increase supplies and prevent price gouging.

A letter to Chris Calamari, the president of Abbott Nutrition, seeks all documents related to the closure of its plant in Sturgis, Michigan. Abbott Nutrition recalled several major brands of powdered formula

and shut down the factory when federal officials began investigat­ing four babies who suffered bacterial infections after consuming formula from the facility.

Abbott is one of only a handful of companies that produce the vast majority of the U.S. formula supply, so their recall wiped out a large segment of the market.

Democrats are framing the shortage as an example of how Americans are harmed when a few big companies control the market. But like inflation or high gas prices, their

challenge is explaining the contributi­ng factors to the public.

Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona said supply chain problems with formula, microchips, gasoline and other goods have complex roots, many that stretch back to the pandemic.

“It’s up for us in Congress to address these, to try to figure out where to go, how do we overcome these bottleneck­s in the supply chains,” Kelly said. “But not because of an election. Because this affects people’s lives.”

 ?? GREGORY BULL/AP ?? Technician­s Welney Huang, right, and Nguyen Nguyen process breast milk at the University of California Health Milk Bank in San Diego on Friday. The formula shortage has sparked a surge of interest among moms in donating breast milk to help bridge the supply gap.
GREGORY BULL/AP Technician­s Welney Huang, right, and Nguyen Nguyen process breast milk at the University of California Health Milk Bank in San Diego on Friday. The formula shortage has sparked a surge of interest among moms in donating breast milk to help bridge the supply gap.

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