posted Thursday, November 21st
2002
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Who came to Eli Lilly's aid? No one's saying
Tucked into the homeland security bill's historic reworking of the federal
government is exactly the sort of standard operating procedure that makes
typical taxpayers throw their hands up and wonder how they can ever get their
arms around the system.
After talking for months about reworking government agencies to better defend
American soil against terrorism, seeming minutiae comes tumbling out in huge
ways at the last minute, surprising clueless congressmen and leaving average-guy
citizens with absolutely no chance to weigh in before Washington types hit the
highway.
Take the inclusion of special legal immunity for pharmaceutical companies,
such as Eli Lilly & Co., buried in the homeland security bill.
The provision -- which, according to a report in The Washington Post, Senate
leaders had to promise to yank next year to guarantee the bill's passage Tuesday
night -- would retroactively shield pharmaceutical companies from certain
lawsuits, similar to ones filed against Lilly that claim vaccines played a role
in children's autism.
Presumably, the stipulation in the bill would help the company with strong
Lafayette ties better predict the risk of pumping out products that counter
terrorist threats. So maybe we should cheer the largesse of Congress and whoever
dropped that nugget into the bill.
Then again, perhaps we should reserve the applause until U.S. Rep. Dan Burton
has left the room. Burton, who has an autistic grandson, was busy reeling in his
support for the homeland security bill once he found out that he had
inadvertently agreed to the pharmaceutical companies' legal shield. "Instead of
passing legislation to take away the rights of families with vaccine-injured
children, we should be passing legislation to try to help them," Burton said.
Frustrating is how conveniently the provision came together -- or almost came
together -- with no one standing up to take credit or blame. Eli Lilly -- whose
CEO, Sidney Taurel, was appointed to the White House Homeland Security Advisory
Council -- claimed no knowledge of it. Senators gave credit to House
Republicans, and vice versa. In the end, it smelled like a special favor, no
matter how anyone denied it.
Consider the sequence of fingers pointed and responsibility deflected, and
you understand why people still trying to figure out who their new congressman
will be don't bother to vote or even pay attention. So much of what happens in
Washington sounds noble in a headline: Homeland Security. Leave No Child Behind.
The Patriot Act. Stripped of their wrapping, they often reveal a jumble of gifts
and unintended consequences that leave typical Americans motionless.
Homeland security is what we all want. The way it has been put together --
with exemptions from the Freedom of Information Act, stiff penalties for
government whistle-blowers and seemingly special favors for big campaign donors
-- isn't.
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