The Sentinel-Record

Biden move to share vaccine designed to spread US influence

- ZEKE MILLER AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON — It won’t speed the manufactur­e of vaccines. It enraged the developers who delivered lifesaving doses in record time. But President Joe Biden’s decision to support waiving intellectu­al property rights for coronaviru­s shots had a broader purpose: to broadcast his administra­tion’s commitment to global leadership.

More than a month of internal debate led up to Biden’s decision this week to endorse internatio­nal calls to strip patent protection­s for vaccines.

The policy shift, embraced by many charitable service organizati­ons around the world and liberals at home, wasn’t new. Biden endorsed it during his campaign for the White House. But the idea was the subject of pitched discussion­s inside the administra­tion over how best to bring the pandemic to an end while restoring U.S. influence abroad.

In the best case, officials acknowledg­e it will take at least a year for any additional vaccines to be produced due to the change. Key European leaders are adamantly opposed to the waivers, and securing the required consensus at the World Trade Organizati­on many never happen.

The specialize­d production, particular­ly of the cutting-edge mRNA vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna, would take even longer. Moreover, the matter could become less pressing if vaccine manufactur­ers can produce enough to satisfy internatio­nal demand themselves.

To Biden, White House officials said, that’s largely beside the point, as officials cast the decision as indicative of the president’s efforts to return the U.S. to the position of leadership after four years of unilateral­ism and protection­ism under former President Donald Trump.

“This is a global health crisis, and the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of the COVID-19 pandemic call for extraordin­ary measures,” U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said Wednesday in announcing the move.

The announceme­nt was met with surprise and disappoint­ment by some of Biden’s closest European allies. German Chancellor Angela Merkel quickly weighed in against it, with a government spokesman saying it would cause “severe complicati­ons” for the production of vaccines.

The timing of the decision also blindsided the vaccine companies, which had aggressive­ly discourage­d the administra­tion from making a choice they feel will hurt American producers.

Officials noted, however, that Tai held more than two dozen meetings with stakeholde­rs, including the drug makers.

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo also opposed the plan, but was excluded from the final meeting, two people familiar with the decision-making process but not authorized to speak publicly about private deliberati­ons said on condition of anonymity. Other White House officials highlighte­d the practical limitation­s of Biden’s decision, but the symbolism won the day.

Trade groups warned it could curtail future investment in lifesaving drugs, and vaccine manufactur­ers and some Republican lawmakers warned that it would amount to a giveaway of American technologi­cal knowhow to China. Vaccine manufactur­ing historical­ly has not been a huge profit driver for drug makers.

“The Chinese Communist Party is already celebratin­g this gift from President Biden,” tweeted Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton, as he highlighte­d a comment from a Chinese official praising Biden’s action.

A vaccine manufactur­ed by a Chinese company was given emergency use authorizat­ion Friday by the World Health Organizati­on, potentiall­y creating a pathway for millions of the doses to reach needy countries through a U.N.-backed program rolling out coronaviru­s vaccines.

The decision by a WHO technical advisory group — a first for a Chinese vaccine — opens the possibilit­y that Sinopharm’s offering could be included in the U.N.-backed COVAX program in coming weeks or months and distribute­d through UNICEF and the WHO’s Americas regional office.

But U.S. vaccine manufactur­ers also warned that the Biden administra­tion’s move could hurt the global supply of shots in the near to moderate term.

The primary obstacle to vaccine production, they’ve argued, remains production bottleneck­s and shortages of the specialize­d supplies needed to make the shots — a challenge that could become more acute if other countries hoard them in anticipati­on of trying to make their own doses at home. The Pfizer vaccine, for instance, has more than 200 components, many of which are in demand around the world.

Some in the Biden White House, in addition to noting that the president pledged to do this during the campaign, also believe that it creates a low stakes political victory. They said the decision, which has been applauded by some on the left, is good Democratic politics and that few will be outraged on the behalf of the drug companies, even though those firms have been praised as heroes of the pandemic.

White House aides maintain that Biden’s action is limited to COVID-19 vaccines because of the scale of the pandemic, but some progressiv­es who have pushed to have the government regulate the price of prescripti­on drugs saw an opening.

“Here’s why Pharma’s really really whining about the COVID vaccine patents: the government might finally have the spine to lower drug prices here at home,” tweeted Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren on Friday. “And it should.”

“President Biden can lower drug prices by producing drugs like insulin, naloxone, and EpiPens at low costs,” she said. “And he doesn’t need Congress to do it — he can use existing compulsory licensing and march-in authoritie­s to bypass patents for public health needs.”

The debate over the inoculatio­ns comes as the administra­tion set a new goal to deliver at least one shot to 70% of adult Americans by July Fourth as Biden tackles the vexing problem of winning over the skeptics and those unmotivate­d to get vaccinated.

Demand for vaccines has dropped off markedly nationwide, with some states leaving more than half their allotment of doses unordered. Already more than 56% of American adults have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and nearly 105 million are fully vaccinated. The U.S. is currently administer­ing first doses at a rate of about 965,000 per day — half the rate of three weeks ago, but almost twice as fast as needed to meet Biden’s target.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A Northwell Health registered nurses fills a syringe with the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine on April 8 at a pop up vaccinatio­n site at the Albanian Islamic Cultural Center in the Staten Island borough of New York. The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday joined calls for more sharing of the technology behind COVID-19 vaccines to help speed the end of the pandemic, a shift that puts the U.S. alongside many in the developing world who want rich countries to do more to get doses to the needy.
The Associated Press A Northwell Health registered nurses fills a syringe with the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine on April 8 at a pop up vaccinatio­n site at the Albanian Islamic Cultural Center in the Staten Island borough of New York. The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday joined calls for more sharing of the technology behind COVID-19 vaccines to help speed the end of the pandemic, a shift that puts the U.S. alongside many in the developing world who want rich countries to do more to get doses to the needy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States