Democrats are asking the correct questions and
demanding that repugicans hold hearings and investigate whether the CDC
and NIH had appropriate funding levels in the areas necessary to combat
Ebola.
In a statement, a group of House Democrats said,
Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi joined Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Nita Lowey (D-NY), Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) and the other Democratic Members of the Labor-Health and Human Services (HHS)-Education Appropriations Subcommittee in calling for hearings on the funding levels for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and related agencies in light of the ongoing public health threat posed by the Ebola virus:As Francis Collins, head of the NIH, said last week: ‘NIH has been working on Ebola vaccines since 2001. It’s not like we suddenly woke up and thought, “Oh my gosh, we should have something ready here.” Frankly, if we had not gone through our 10-year slide in research support, we probably would have had a vaccine in time for this that would’ve gone through clinical trials and would have been ready.’….The Appropriations Committee should return to Washington immediately and convene hearings to discuss and debate the issue of funding levels for NIH, CDC and related agencies in light of the public health challenges posed by the Ebola virus. While it is important that the House Homeland Security and Energy & Commerce committees have held hearings, it is not right that the Appropriations committee has not met in accordance with its responsibilities to fund these critical public health agencies.
While repugicans are busy doing their usual blame
Obama thing and the media is whipping up needless hysteria over whether
or not Ebola will be invading our homes and killing us all, Democrats
are asking the important question. How did we get here?
The answer isn’t what repugicans would like you to
believe it is. The lackluster Ebola response is not a byproduct of “bad
Obama leadership.” Certain simpletons, we like to call these people repugicans, point to the overall funding levels at the CDC and NIH and
proclaim that this is all Obama’s fault. Other media simpletons,
including a Pinocchio loving grader at the Washington Post, used a similar argument to get repugicans off the hook.
The problem with only looking at overall funding
levels is that it misses the point. Over the last few years, the CDC has
had billions of dollars taken out of its budget for infectious disease preparedness at the federal, state, and local levels.
This means that the CDC started with fewer resources to work with when
the Ebola situation started. There is a reason the Congress rushed
through an infusion of cash to fight Ebola before they left town. The
CDC budget was left short on preparedness.
It isn’t a black and white situation, but the
sequester that repugicans love so much has hurt. The focus should be on
congressional repugicans, for one simple reason. The president doesn’t
make the budget. Obama can make budgetary recommendations, but at the
end of the day, as the old saying goes, the House controls the purse
strings.
The talk about Obama’s budget is a smokescreen
coming from people who don’t want to discuss the real issue. The
important question isn’t did the CDC have enough funding. What needs to
be investigated is if the CDC was properly funded in the area of
preparedness.
House repugicans love to “investigate” any Obama
scandal that Faux News can dream up, but it is a safe bet that they won’t
investigate the role that their own budgetary choices played in the
current situation.
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