The Mercury News

With no new law to curb drug costs, Trump tries own changes

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WASHINGTON >> Unable to land the big deal with Congress to curb drug costs, President Donald Trump on Friday moved on his own to allow imports of cheaper medicines, along with other limited steps that could have some election-year appeal.

At a White House ceremony, Trump signed four executive orders. One was about importatio­n. The others would direct drugmaker rebates straight to patients, provide insulin and EpiPens at steep discounts to low-income people, and use lower internatio­nal prices to pay for some Medicare drugs.

Trump cast his directives as far-reaching, but they mostly update earlier administra­tion ideas that have not yet gone into effect.

“I’m unrigging the system that is many decades old,” he declared, promising “massive” savings.

Consumers may not notice immediate changes, since the orders must be carried out by the federal bureaucrac­y and could face court challenges.

Democrats, meanwhile, are eager to draw a contrast between Trump and their own sweeping plans to authorize Medicare to negotiate lower prices with pharmaceut­ical companies, an idea the president had backed as a candidate. A bill by Speaker Nancy Pelosi already passed the House and aligns with presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden’s approach.

Friday’s event was definitely not the bill-signing the White House had once hoped for. Trump came into office complainin­g that pharmaceut­ical companies were “getting away with murder” and promising to bring them under control. Nearly four years later, things are much the same despite some recent moderation in price increases.

Trump pulled his punches, Pelosi said in a statement. “After promising that he would ‘negotiate like crazy’ for lower prescripti­on drug prices, it is clear that President Trump meant not negotiate at all,” she said, adding that if Trump is serious about lowering prices he should tell Senate Republican­s to pass her bill.

A drive to enact major legislatio­n this year stalled in Congress. Although Trump told Republican senators that lowering prescripti­on prices is “something you have to do,” many remain reluctant to use federal authority to force drugmakers to charge less.

Meanwhile, congressio­nal Democrats calculate that the election will strengthen their hand, and they’ll finally be able to enact a law that authorizes Medicare to negotiate prices directly. Neither side in Congress has had an incentive to deal, and the White House has been unable to work Trump’s will.

Last year the House did pass Pelosi’s Medicare negotiatio­ns bill, which would have capped out-of-pocket drug costs for older people and expanded program benefits as well. It had no path forward in the Republican

Senate, and the White House calls it unworkable.

But there was an alternativ­e. A bipartisan Senate bill backed by Trump stopped short of giving Medicare bargaining power, but would have limited annual price increases and capped costs for older people. The bill passed out of a Senate committee but was never brought to the full body.

“It’s not clear why the administra­tion hasn’t made a bigger push to line up votes to get a bill through the Senate and a deal with Congress, given strong public support to lower drug costs,” said Tricia Neuman, a Medicare expert with the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

Americans remain worried about drug costs, with nearly 9 in 10 saying in a recent Gallup-West Health poll that they’re concerned the pharmaceut­ical industry will take advantage of the coronaviru­s pandemic to raise prices. Another Gallup-West Health survey found 65% saying the Trump administra­tion had made little or no progress limiting increases in prescripti­on drug costs.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump, flanked by health care workers, holds up a signed executive order on lowering drug prices during a ceremony at the White House on Friday.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump, flanked by health care workers, holds up a signed executive order on lowering drug prices during a ceremony at the White House on Friday.

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