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GOP Know-Nothings Fought Pandemic Preparedness
When House Appropriations Committee chairman David Obey, the Wisconsin Democrat who has long championed investment in pandemic preparation, included roughly $900 million for that purpose in this year's emergency stimulus bill, he was ridiculed by conservative operatives and congressional Republicans.
Obey and other advocates for the spending argued, correctly, that a pandemic hitting in the midst of an economic downturn could turn a recession into something far worse -- with workers ordered to remain in their homes, workplaces shuttered to avoid the spread of disease, transportation systems grinding to a halt and demand for emergency services and public health interventions skyrocketing. Indeed, they suggested, pandemic preparation was essential to any responsible plan for renewing the U.S. economy.
But former White House political czar Karl Rove and key congressional Republicans -- led by Maine Senator Susan Collins -- aggressively attacked the notion that there was a connection between pandemic preparation and economic recovery.
Now, as the World Health Organization says a deadly swine flu outbreak that apparently began in Mexico but has spread to the United States has the potential to develop into a pandemic, Obey's attempt to secure the money seems eerily prescient.
And his partisan attacks on his efforts seem not just creepy, but dangerous.
The current swine flu outbreak is not a pandemic, and there is reason to hope that it can be contained.
But it has already believed to have killed more than 100 people in a neighboring country and sickened dozens of Americans -- causing the closing of schools and other public facilities in U.S. cities.
Dr. Anne Schuchat, the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Interim Deputy Director for Science and Public Health Program, explained to reporters on Saturday that, because the cases that have been discovered so far are so widely spread (in California, Kansas, New York, Ohio and Texas), the outbreak is already "beyond containment."
On Sunday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced that a national "public health emergency" had been declatred. Notably, the second question at the White House press conference on the emergency had to do with the potential impact on the economic recovery.
On Monday, the question began to be answered, as Associated Press reported -- under the headline: "World Markets Struck By Swine Flu Fears" -- that: "World stock markets fell Monday as investors worried that a deadly outbreak of swine flu in Mexico could go global and derail any global economic recovery."
Before U.S. markets opened, the Wall Street Journal reported: "U.S. stock futures fell sharply Monday as the outbreak of deadly swine flu stoked fears that a possible recovery in the global economy could be derailed."
That's unsettling.
To many Americans, genuinely scary.
Not faked-up, politically self-serving scary, like the arguments Rove advanced in February to frame opposition to the stimulus package Obey crafted in the House.
George Bush's political manipulator dismissed Obey's proposals as "disturbing" and "laden with new spending programs." He said the congressman was peddling a plan based on "deeply flawed assumptions."
Like what?
Rove specifically complained that Obey's proposal included "$462 million for the Centers for Disease Control, and $900 million for pandemic flu preparations."
This was wrong, the political operative charged, because the health care sector added jobs in 2008.
As bizarre as that criticism may sound -- especially now -- Rove's argument was picked up by House and Senate Republicans, who made it an essential message in their attacks on the legislation. Even as Rove and his compatriots argued that a stimulus bill should include initiatives designed to shore-up and maintain any recovery, they consistently, and loudly, objected to spending money to address the potentially devastating economic impact of a major public health emergency.
The attack on pandemic preparation became so central to the GOP strategies that AP reported in February: "Republicans, meanwhile, plan to push for broader and deeper tax cuts, to trim major spending provisions that support Democrats' longer-term policy goals, and to try to knock out what they consider questionable spending items, such as $870 million to combat the flu and $400 million to slow the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases."
Famously, Maine Senator Collins, the supposedly moderate Republican who demanded cuts in health care spending in exchange for her support of a watered-down version of the stimulus, fumed about the pandemic funding: "Does it belong in this bill? Should we have $870 million in this bill No, we should not."
Even now, Collins continues to use her official website to highlight the fact that she led the fight to strip the pandemic preparedness money out of the Senate's version of the stimulus measure.
The Republicans essentially succeeded. The Senate version of the stimulus plan included no money whatsoever for pandemic preparedness. In the conference committee that reconciled the House and Senate plans, Obey and his allies succeeded in securing $50 million for improving information systems at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
But state and local governments, and the emergency services that would necessarily be on the frontlines in any effort to contain a pandemic, got nothing.
Did Rove, Collins and their compatriots want a pandemic?
Of course not.
They were just playing politics, in the exceptionally narrow and irresponsible manner that characterized the Republican response to the stimulus debate - and that, because of Democratic compromises in the Senate, dumbed down the plan President Obama ultimately signed.
No serious player in Washington has been unaware of the fears with regard to a flu pandemic. They have been well-publicized and well-discussed. Even Collins admitted as she objected to the House allocation for preparedness: "I think that everybody in the room is concerned about a pandemic flu."
And it is important to point out that no serious player in Washington could have been unaware of the threat that a pandemic -- or even the fear of one -- would pose to economic renewal. Every discussion about a pandemic begins with the public health component but moves quickly to an acknowledgement that an outbreak, and the ensuing quarantines, would bring economic activity to a virtual standstill.
So Rove, Collins and those who echoed their know-nothing appeals understood that they were wrong.
But they bet that they would be able to score their political points without any consequences.
Now that fears of a pandemic have been raised, however, it is appropriate to ask whether individuals who are so manifestly irresponsible and partisan should be taken seriously.
This is an especially important concern with regard to Collins, who portrays herself as a moderate who tries to make things work in Washington.
Senate Democratic leaders bowed to Collins in the process of crafting their chamber's version of the stimulus. In doing so, they eliminated more than 80 percent of the modest amount of money that had been allocated for pandemic preparedness -- and all of the money that would have helped emergency services.
Collins played politics with public health, and the economic recovery. That makes her about as bad a player as you will find in a town full of bad players.
But Senate Democrats bent to her demands. That makes them, at the very least, complicit in the weakening of what needed to be a muscular plan.
The bottom line is that there were no heroes in either party on the Senate side of the ugly process that ridiculed and then eliminated pandemic preparedness funding.
There is, however, a hero on the House side. Throughout the process, David Obey battled to get Congress to recognize that a pandemic would threaten not just public health but a fragile economic recovery.


32 Comments so far
Show All"But former White House political czar Karl Rove and key congressional Republicans -- led by Maine Senator Susan Collins -- aggressively attacked the notion that there was a connection between pandemic preparation and economic recovery."
Astounding!
Good article, bad title.
As long as the media keeps denying that the economic and social catastrophes facing the US (and the world) are the result of premeditated crimes perpetrated by neocons, the downward economic spiral will continue.
They are not "GOP know-nothings", they are clever criminals that have known exactly what they were doing at every step of the way. They continue to demonstrate their skill by assuring an endless flow of US taxpayer dollars into the hands of the financial industry (including insurance companies)criminals that caused the problems.
Unfortunately many Democrats are complicit with the the subject GOP criminals.
Hmmm -
Remember when the Bush Gang swung the cudgel of the Bird Flu scare as a spending pretext directed toward martial law? Maybe Rove's just bitter because they didn't get their way then. And because he's settled into stubborn perpetual bitterness mode.
Someone should make sure that Sen. Collins has a Hospital Volunteer Application readily available for flu duty. She can consider it a campaign function.
Some explain to me again why Karl Rove isn't behind bars for the rest of his life?
". . . why Karl Rove isn't behind bars for the rest of his life?"
---------------------------------------
See Krugman (especially) http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/04/24-6
and Hedges http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/04/27-1
on this site.
What about the pandemic of war started by the lies of Bush et al?
Are Rove and Collins saying oops, never mind, or are they busy attacking Obama and everything progressive like their cohorts. The Republicans held sway for eight long years, practically unopposed by the "loyal opposition". They created a society that is supposed to work for the wealthy, but is falling apart even as it is demanding more trillions of tax-payer money. Yet they have the temerity to criticize Obama after 100 days because the country is still in a mess. In any sane world they would be hiding their heads in shame and then trying to figure out how to help. Instead they are so much enraged by everything Obama does they are making clowns of themselves, and pests too. Are they stupid and arrogant, or merely the greedy slaves and wannabe mouthpieces of the corporate giants who will keep on munching away at our country or know the reason why.
More disturbing is the blind criticism of the 'liberals' and radicals. They aren't being much help either. At least those like Ralph Nader have constructive advice to give. Lets just hope Obama is listening over the name-calling and screams of outraged radicals who would have him wave a magic wand to create their perfect world. Perhaps the second 100 days will tell. Hopefully the pandemic of naysayeres will ease up also. Give Obama a break. He's a smart, articulate Afro-American who knows how to play politics to get what he wants or at lest what he can get. But he's not superman.
Since Rove likes to get down in the mud I suggest he fly down to Mexico, go to the largest pig farm, and kiss every swine on the lips.
I believe Mexicans frown upon incest.
Rainborowe
You should be ashamed insulting pigs like that.
:-)
I am! I really like pigs; they're probably more intelligent than we are, too.
Rainborowe
Every discussion about a pandemic begins with the public health component but moves quickly to an acknowledgement that an outbreak, and the ensuing quarantines, would bring economic activity to a virtual standstill.
-------------------
Who stands to benefit from economic activity grinding to a halt from a flu pandemic?
Other than the pharma companies delivering a vaccine who could use this "shock" to their advantage?
Let the conspiracy theories fly.
No mention of the fact that if it werent for meat eaters and the livestock industry, there would be no swine flu pandemic. You cant get such a disease from breathing around tomatoes. More arguments found at http://animalvegfaq.tripod.com
When human meat eaters "mind their own business" innocent parties suffer.
Go vegan. Its common sense. No argument for meat eating works except wanting to commit ecocide.
Waste of water resources, waste of land, waste of rain forest to grow crops to feed livestock, and a waste of non human life.
Turkeys have been so mutated through forced breeding they cant even procreate without artificial insemination, and they and pigs usually have to be euthanized if put in a farm sanctuary because they get so big unnaturally their legs break.
At least their always war and homicide to provide some karma justice.
I agree that industrialized livestock operations are disgusting and can be a vector for disease, as well as being immoral. They also waste resources. However, viruses exist and mutate naturally, although factory farming can exacerbate the spread of disease.
I lived in an all vegan eco-village for a few months. After one month of eating vegan, I developed severe tendonitis. It started getting better once I began eating some meat again. In order for vegans to be healthy, they have to be very aware of the nutrition they're receiving and not just eat veggies in order to avoid meat. Most of the vegans I've met are not very healthy, especially in regards to poor skin and muscle tone, lower energy levels and less mental prowess. I even knew a young man that ate insane amounts of soy, was of average build and weight, but had obvious man-boobs. I was twice his age, but physically, I ran circles around the guy.
Understanding that humans are omnivorous, I take a more balanced approach to nutrition. I only eat locally raised, organic meat about three to five times a week, and am very conscious of the nutrition content of the non-meat foods, which are also organic and mostly local when available. I think that eating locally grown, organic foods, including some meat, is healthy for the individual, the community and the environment.
Shouldn't the title be: "Wildly popular democratic President backed by democratic majority inexplicably cave to know-nothing Republicans?" The Right Wing blogs are calling the slow US response to this emergency: "Obama's Katrina Moment" -- A disingenuous charge to be sure; but where's the leadership?
Isn't it ironic that globalization of virus diseases can undermine that other oft praised economic globalizaton? Yeah, we have Free Trade in diseases, too. Kudos to Rep. Obey. I studied environmental science and entered a deep depression when the extreme court ensconced the Bush regime.
Perhaps the government could give early release to convicted cannabis farmers to make room for . . . oh, never mind.
Since money ended mano a mano competition, natural selection has become subverted.
The ugliest, sleaziest, corrupt, criminal, weakest, cowardly, lying, murdering, sneaky, hypocritical, superstitious, greediest and richest chickenhawk Republicans and conservative Democrats rule.
Karl Rove and what he represents are the real pandemic. Looking for something that'll kill you quick? This nation, sick and infected with George Wanker Bushism, needs only to let it back in the house a second time. Or perhaps Obysmal and his minions will do it in a kinder, gentler fashion.
When it rains it pours.
A strong 6.0-magnitude quake has rocked Mexico City as a deadly flu outbreak in the city continues to keep the sprawling capital on edge.
There is only one cure for a flu pandemic:
Tax cuts for the wealthy. Duh.
Not to get off topic, although it might be related, but in addition to what all of you have posted here, am I the only one other than a bunch of New Yorkers and a pissed off Mayor who found it odd that Air Farce One and an F-16 flew over Manhattan for a "photo opportunity?" Interesting developments.
Janet Napolitano says the GOP(swine) flu crossed the border from Canada...
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
What scares me is all those uninsured americans that will contract swine flu, and not report it as they cannot afford to pay for treatment.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
Obama's host dies from 'flu-like symptoms' 27 Apr 2009 The White House says that Barack Obama is "highly engaged" in monitoring the swine flu outbreak that has spread over the border from Mexico into the US – and well he might. For a while, the President's doctors feared that he may have come closer than almost anyone in the country to contracting the virus. According to alarming reports from Mexico City, Felipe Solis, a distinguished archaeologist who showed Mr Obama around the city's anthropology museum during his visit to Mexico earlier this month, died the next day from "flu-like symptoms".
[See CLG items: DoD to carry out 'military missions' during pandemic, WMD attack 08 Mar 2009 and DoD to 'augment civilian law' during pandemic or bioterror attack 11 May 2007.]
Karl Rove is desperate to distract attention from the worst response to a public emergency, Hurricane Katrina, that happened under his boss' watch. This is a part of it. As Rove is a low-blow douche bag, this needs to brought up every time he opens his pie hole in loose connection with emergency response: it is what he would do if the positions were reversed.
And if those Senate Democrats hadn't bowed down, Rove wouldn't have been as powerful !
Yes, Karl Rove and the GOP cabal are nasty as can be. However, when we're all stuck with a capitulating faux "opposition", then what else to expect? And why aren't the Senate Dems and the House giving higher priority to HR 676 which could effectively cut down on such hellish health issues like the ones described in this article? It seems that the pols who much rather waste more taxpayer money destroying the lives of the sweetheart civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and possibly Iran rather than repair our broken-hearted and bankrupted healthcare system.
http://www.guardian.co.uk:80/commentisfree/2009/apr/27/swine-flu-mexico-health
Link from the Institute for Public Accuracy to article authored by Mike Davis
Davis is author of
"The Monster at Our Door: The Global Threat of Avian Flu." He just wrote
the piece "The Really Dangerous Swine Wear Suits." Davis' other books
include "City of Quartz," "Ecology of Fear," "In Praise of Barbarians"
and "Planet of Slums."
"Did Rove, Collins and their compatriots want a pandemic?
Of course not."
I'm not too sure about Rove.
As for Collins, she has access to blue-ribbon healthcare paid for by We the People.
"Know nothings!?" What vapid propaganda.
The republicans musta just spent a couple decades in isolation from all things medical. They must be falling apart at the seems those Republican care nots.
Of course this bold presumption that it was outside the intellectual capacity of the GOP to consider pandemic preparedness being forwarded without even the consideration that the opposite is true. That the Republicans were well aware how likely a pandemic was and cared not to avert the situation, so bold anybody that state such, obvious reality.
Peroxide up the cubbards. It's going to be a nasty flu decade. Be sure you have a pry bar on hand to bust up the concrete in the basement and an auger to burrow because this type of multi-continent flu is often followed by fierce militant dominance.
Wait, you've got it all wrong! Preventing a pandemic wouldn't have stimulated the economy, but allowing one to develop will!
Hospitals, nursing homes, pharmaceutical companies, coffin manufacturers, cemeteries and funeral homes will all benefit from the spread of a serious and often lethal disease.
See? As always, Rove, Limbaugh and their kind are right!
"Did Rove, Collins and their compatriots want a pandemic?"
Ooooh yeah they did. It's called Disaster Capitalism. Get Naomi Klein on the phone. raydelcamino gets it.
"Some explain to me again why Karl Rove isn't behind bars for the rest of his life?"
For the same reasons Dubbya and the rest of his crew are running free.