Los Angeles Times

Trump gets a second shot at picking Health secretary

Alex Azar is not an ideologue like Tom Price, but Democrats are skeptical

- By Cathleen Decker cathleen.decker @latimes.com Twitter: @cathleende­cker

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s first Health and Human Services secretary, Tom Price, was an ideologica­l warrior, bent as the president is on repealing and replacing Obamacare, the signature domestic achievemen­t of the former president. Even though he was steeped in healthcare policy, Price was an outsider to the agency he was sent to run.

The second time around, Trump went in the opposite direction, on Monday nominating as Price’s replacemen­t Alex Azar, a former pharmaceut­ical executive and a high-ranking Health and Human Services official during George W. Bush’s second term.

If confirmed by the Senate, Azar would replace Price, who resigned under pressure on Sept. 29 after a series of stories in Politico documented his repeated use of private jets and government aircraft instead of commercial planes, at a cost of more than $400,000. Investigat­ions into Price’s actions are ongoing.

Price, a Republican who represente­d a Georgia district in Congress before he was named to the Cabinet, also presided over the failure of the president’s effort to make good on a campaign promise to eradicate Obamacare.

Azar was deputy secretary of Health and Human Services from 2005 to 2007. He later served at the drug firm Eli Lilly and Co. as director of managed care and, from 2012 to early this year, as president.

In announcing the appointmen­t, Trump suggested that Azar’s tenure at the drug company would give him insight into how to trim prescripti­on costs, historical­ly a major healthcare complaint.

“Happy to announce, I am nominating Alex Azar to be the next HHS secretary,” Trump said. “He will be a star for better healthcare and lower drug prices!”

Democrats on the committees that will oversee Azar’s nomination expressed some skepticism, in part because of his years at Eli Lilly.

The top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee that will vet the nominee, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, said he would ask for Azar’s “commitment to faithfully implement the Affordable Care Act and take decisive, meaningful action to curtail the runaway train of prescripti­on drug costs.”

Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the top-ranking Democrat on the Health Committee, used the nomination of Azar to criticize the man he would replace. She said Price “sabotaged families’ coverage, tried time after time to jam Trumpcare through Congress, eroded women’s access to reproducti­ve care, and more.”

“In considerin­g Mr. Azar’s nomination I will seek to understand whether he is willing to stand up to President Trump and his administra­tion to ensure the needs of all patients and families are put first,” she said. “I am also interested in how, given Mr. Azar’s profession­al background, he believes he can fairly execute any significan­t effort to lower drug prices for patients.”

Republican­s lauded the nomination.

Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, the Republican who heads the Health Committee, said that Azar had “the qualificat­ions and experience to get results” and that the committee would “promptly” set a date for hearings.

Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), the Finance Committee chairman, used the announceme­nt to criticize the Affordable Care Act and said he looked forward to hearing Azar’s “plan to restore our faith in our nation’s healthcare system and get it back on track.”

Andy Slavitt, who oversaw Medicare, Medicaid and insurance markets during the Obama administra­tion, said that although he differed with any Trump pick over “political values … realistica­lly, it could have been a helluva lot worse.”

“He’s somebody who has been a career civil servant; he has a lot of respect for the people in the department, and that’s a good start,” Slavitt said.

But he said Azar’s impact, assuming he was confirmed, would rest more on whether he would stand up to the president “when Trump is outlandish,” and whether he would reach across the aisle to encourage bipartisan solutions to healthcare issues.

Murray and Alexander have been working on a bipartisan plan to shore up healthcare coverage, but it has been cast aside repeatedly as Republican­s sought party-line votes on rescinding Obamacare.

Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Assn., said Price came into the department “with very, very strong ideologica­l views” and declined to meet with his group. Azar, he said, has not been among those openly fighting to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and by reputation is less partisan.

“He’s smart, practical, listens to all sides,” Benjamin said, adding, “We’ve got somebody whose heart is in the right place.”

He said he was not bothered at this point by Azar’s affiliatio­n with Eli Lilly. “He knows the inside of the way the industry works; maybe he comes up with clever solutions.”

Robert Weissman, president of the left-leaning advocacy group Public Citizen, strongly disagreed, suggesting in a statement that Azar was complicit in “price gouging” by the nation’s pharmaceut­ical companies.

“If Alex Azar’s nomination is confirmed, then Big Pharma’s coup d’etat in the healthcare sphere will be virtually complete,” he said.

‘He’s smart, practical, listens to all sides. We’ve got somebody whose heart is in the right place.’ — Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Assn., on nominee Alex Azar

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? ALEX AZAR, shown in 2006, was deputy secretary of Health and Human Services from 2005 to 2007. He later was an executive at the drug firm Eli Lilly and Co.
Evan Vucci Associated Press ALEX AZAR, shown in 2006, was deputy secretary of Health and Human Services from 2005 to 2007. He later was an executive at the drug firm Eli Lilly and Co.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States