Miami Herald

Miami congresswo­man wants American branding on all vaccines sent abroad

Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar wants vaccinated people outside the U.S. to know if their doses came from the U.S.

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY adaugherty@mcclatchyd­c.com

Miami Republican U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar wants the U.S. to be more like China and Russia when it comes to internatio­nal vaccine distributi­on.

For months, the two U.S. adversarie­s have sent their own COVID-19 vaccines to countries across the world. China sent millions of doses to Chile, and the South American country’s 84% vaccinatio­n rate ranks among the highest in the world. Russia, as part of a public-relations push, vaccinated the entire micro-state of San Marino, which is now offering Russian-made vaccines to tourists in a bid to revive its

economy.

Salazar thinks the U.S. should be employing similar tactics, particular­ly in Latin America. On Friday, Salazar introduced the AMIGOS Act, which stands for American Medical Innovation Generating Overseas Security, with a group of Republican lawmakers.

The bill would require American-made vaccines to be packaged with “U.S.A. branding” when vaccines are sent directly to other countries. It also would make Congress responsibl­e for signing off on waivers for intellectu­alproperty protection­s for U.S.-made vaccines.

President Joe Biden reversed course this month and waived intellectu­al-property rights for COVID-19 vaccines amid pressure from Democratic lawmakers and dozens of countries. Republican­s, including Salazar, said they oppose the decision because it undermines incentives for U.S. companies to spend money and time to develop vaccines.

“This decision does not immediatel­y improve the global supply of vaccines, which are desperatel­y needed in hardest-hit countries,” Salazar said on May 7. “Moreover, it will undermine the protection U.S. companies need to facilitate research and developmen­t, invest in miracle cures, and protect against manipulati­on from state-backed industries in China and Russia.”

The head of the World Health Organizati­on called the change “a monumental moment in the fight against COVD-19.” U.S. vaccine makers Moderna and Pfizer saw their stock prices decrease when the change was announced. Johnson & Johnson’s stock did not drop.

Waviing intellectu­alproperty rights is subect to approval by the World Trade Organizati­on.

“These extraordin­ary times and circumstan­ces call for extraordin­ary measures,” said Katherine Tai, the top U.S. trade negotiator. “The U.S. supports the waiver of IP protection­s on COVID-19

vaccines to help end the pandemic and we’ll actively participat­e in [World Trade Organizati­on] negotiatio­ns to make that happen.”

It’s unlikely that the AMIGOS Act will pass the

Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives. Salazar, who represents thousands of Latin American immigrants in Congress, is likely to face a competitiv­e reelection bid in 2022.

In a statement, Salazar said the U.S. should prioritize direct vaccine distributi­on abroad once every American has access to vaccines. She said U.S. and other nations’ donations to COVAX, an internatio­nal vaccine-distributi­on effort run by the World Health Organizati­on, means low- and middle-income countries that end up with shots through the program aren’t aware if U.S.-made vaccines are the ones distribute­d to them.

“Rather than crushing free market innovation, the U.S. should be proposing bold surplus vaccine donation plans, increase awareness of current U.S. efforts, and ramp up vaccine manufactur­ing,” Salazar said in a statement. “Our most vulnerable allies and neighbors, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean are counting on us to get this right and slow viral spread and COVID-19 mutations. I’ve introduced the AMIGOS Act to develop a strategy for effective U.S. vaccine diplomacy and counter Communist China’s and [Vladimir] Putin’s Russia’s growing influence in our hemisphere.”

 ??  ?? A woman is inoculated with China’s Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine in Quezon, Philippine­s, on Friday. China has sent millions of doses around the world.
A woman is inoculated with China’s Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine in Quezon, Philippine­s, on Friday. China has sent millions of doses around the world.
 ?? COLE BURSTON The Canadian Press via AP ?? Workers unload a shipment of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at the FedEx hub in Toronto on April 28, 2021.
COLE BURSTON The Canadian Press via AP Workers unload a shipment of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at the FedEx hub in Toronto on April 28, 2021.

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