Capitol Hillbillies
Shortly
after Sen. Bill Frist introduced legislation limiting suits
against vaccine makers, the drug industry's trade group gave
$10,000 to the surgeon-turned-politician's political action
committee.
Throughout his political career, the new Senate majority
leader has supported the health care industry and the industry
has supported him.
Frist, R-Tenn., has raised more than $2 million from doctors,
health insurers, drug companies and others in the health care
industry. That's roughly 20 percent of all the contributions
to his two Senate campaigns.
Spokesman Nick Smith said the senator's votes have nothing to
do with his contributions.
"Health care is a priority of Senator Frist," Smith said. "He
works on legislation that improves the quality of health care
and the affordability of health care for all Americans.
Senator Frist votes his conscience. His votes take into
account his understanding of the medical field."
Industries often give to lawmakers who sit on the committees
overseeing their interests, and Frist is a member of the
Senate Health Committee.
But Frist's relationship with the health industry is deeper.
Besides being the Senate's only medical doctor, his father
founded what is now HCA Inc., the nation's largest for-profit
hospital chain.
"It's not at all surprising that the industry is one of the
big givers to him," said Larry Noble, executive director of
the Center for Responsive Politics, a research group that
tracks money and campaigns.
"He is one of their people in terms of where he comes from, in
terms of the committees he's on. He's from the industry, he
supports the industry and he understands their problems and
needs."
HCA is Frist's largest lifetime financial patron; the company
and its officers and employees have contributed $172,250 to
the senator's campaign committee and his leadership political
action committee, which raises funds under federal
contribution limits as well as unlimited soft money donations.
The company recently agreed to pay the Justice Department $631
million to settle allegations of health care fraud that
occurred when the company was headed by Rick Scott.
Frist's next four largest contributors also have Tennessee
connections: FedEx, which gave $140,225; AutoZone, $115,000;
Vanderbilt University, $74,950; and the law firm of Bass,
Berry and Sims, whose clients include HCA and which gave
$59,875. The figures include donations from employees,
officials, the companies and PACs.
The president of the American Medical Association said doctors
appreciate having one of their own on Capitol Hill.
"You don't have to give a lot of background and explanation,"
said Dr. Yank D. Coble, an endocrinologist in Jacksonville,
Fla. "This is a person you can communicate with and has some
experiences you can relate to."
Frist has supported the drug industry and the medical
community on several key issues. In March, he introduced
legislation to limit suits against companies who used
Thimerosal, a mercury-based ingredient in certain childhood
vaccines that some parents believe have caused autism in their
children. The bill would have required the parents to file
claims through a federal vaccine compensation program that
caps damages at $250,000.
The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the
drug industry trade group, supported the measure. After Frist
introduced the bill, the drug trade group gave $10,000 to
Frist's political action committee.
House Republicans, who received $1 million in campaign
contributions from the drug industry's trade group, eventually
added the provision to the homeland security bill. The
contributions came in the two months leading up to the
measure's passage. House and Senate leaders said Friday they
would pass legislation removing the provision.
Smith said the senator's bill was based on recommendations
from a federal advisory committee on vaccines and the American
Academy of Pediatrics. "He, like many Americans, is very
concerned about a stable and affordable vaccine supply," Smith
said.
The senator also sided with the drug industry on other votes.
In the last session of Congress, Frist was one of 21 senators
to vote against legislation to speed generic drugs to market,
allow importers to buy U.S.-made drugs in Canada, and allow
states to force drug companies to give Medicaid discounts. And
he voted against the industry-opposed Democratic plan for a
Medicare prescription drug benefit.
Frist also joined with his fellow doctors to support an
unsuccessful effort to limit punitive damages and curtail
lawyers' fees in medical malpractice cases.
© Copyright
2003 by Capitol Hill Blue
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