WASHINGTON—Today, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a hearing on “Restoring Trust in FDA: Rooting Out Illicit Products.” During the hearing, members exposed how the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stumbled from crisis to crisis during the Biden Administration, failing in its core mission. Bureaucratic red tape, inefficiencies, and weak oversight have led to a surge in harmful products, food safety violations, and counterfeit drugs infiltrating the legitimate supply chain. Members praised the Trump Administration for taking action to ensure FDA adheres to its mission and Make America Healthy Again and pledged to work with the administration to further this goal.
Key Takeaways:
The FDA stumbled from crisis to crisis during the Biden Administration, failing in its core mission. Bureaucratic red tape, inefficiencies, and weak oversight have led to a surge in harmful products, food safety violations, and counterfeit drugs infiltrating the legitimate supply chain.
The FDA must regain the trust of the American people and put their health, not bureaucracy, first. This includes reducing red tape and barriers to innovation to ensure the agency adheres to its mission.
President Trump and his administration are taking decisive action to Make America Healthy Again and Congress will work alongside them to further this goal.
Member Highlights:
Chairman Comer discussed with an expert witness how the FDA has failed to approve safer tobacco and nicotine alternatives, which has created a thriving market for unsafe products.
Chairman Comer: “The FDA’s refusal to approve new tobacco products created a thriving market for illegal and unsafe products, often from China. These products are often targeted at children. What should FDA be doing to prevent these illicit Chinese products targeting our kids?”
Mr. Bentley: “FDA have set up a multi-agency Task Force is particularly the partnership with DOJ and CBP to try and track and halt the importation of products from China, but at the end of the day this will be nothing really more than a bandage, unless its own internal processes can be reformed, which also, fortunately, don’t require more staff or more funding.”
Additionally, Chairman Comer discussed with an expert witness how the Biden FDA failed to prevent the infant formula crisis.
Chairman Comer: “Mr. Williams, this Committee investigated the infant formula crisis extensively last Congress and found several failures at FDA including a failure to encourage competition and resiliency in the market. Can you talk through how the FDA failed to prevent the crisis and what needs to be done to improve competition and resilience to ensure such a crisis never happens again?”
Mr. Williams: “Yes, one of the main problems, particularly with supply, was that we would have manufacturers write to FDA and say, ‘we’re thinking about getting into the infant formula business.’ FDA would respond with, ‘please, don’t.’ They wanted to keep the number of suppliers down to six, and they did that. So consequently, when we had one plant that had a problem—that actually had been investigated—when it had stopped production, that’s when we hit a huge supply problem. But there was one other problem […] when FDA passes regulations on infant formula, that raises the price of infant formula for people who can’t get it for free. And what happens is less well-off consumers extend the infant formula with water, and there’s nothing more dangerous than the primary source of nutrition being extended with water for infants.”
Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Wis.), the chairman of the Health Care and Financial Services Subcommittee, discussed with an expert witness how special interests are increasing bureaucratic red tape and driving up food costs.
Rep. Grothman: “Americans have been grappling with high inflation, especially food inflation, during the Biden Administration. Grocery prices rose 22%. Would you simplify the FDA’s food regulatory structure to lower prices, and can you give me some examples of what could be done?”
Mr. Williams: “Yeah, I believe that is exactly what I would do. I think a lot of the problem with FDA food regulations, from my expertise, and it really is now going on over 40 years and I continue to look at it, is that too many of FDA’s regulations were not being made because it was going to keep food safer or because it was going to help nutrition. A lot of it is because of some firms controlling FDA, saying ‘we want regulations to put our competitors at a disadvantage.’ All those regulations have to be complied with, and all of that compliance by those firms raises prices. They don’t pay for the regulations. This is a big misunderstanding, particularly in FDA.”
Additionally, Rep. Grothman discussed with expert witnesses how providing safer alternatives could increase Americans’ life expectancy.
Rep. Grothman: “America does spend a great deal on medicine, and a lot of that is on drugs. Nevertheless, our life expectancy seems to be less than other developed countries. Can you comment on that?”
Mr. Bentley: “Congressman, my expertise is basically in tobacco policy, but I will say that an easy way to increase life expectancy and reduce cancer is have more authorized, safer alternatives to cigarettes onto the market, which FDA has been stymying for the last five years.”
Mr. Miller: “I would just add that when it comes to holistic products, products made from American agriculture, like hemp, these give alternatives to the pharmaceuticals, that a lot of Americans find tremendous relief in. We should be promoting them, but we should also, and as I’ve been saying, regulate them strictly.”
Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) discussed how the U.S. has the lowest life expectancy in the developed world despite spending the most on pharmaceuticals. He also questioned witnesses about the importance of domestic manufacturing of critical medicine.
Rep. Perry: “The average life expectancy for the average American is 78 years despite spending more than every other developed country that has an expectancy of 82 years. Six in 10 Americans have at least one chronic disease. More than 40% of American children are suffering from at least one health condition.”
Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) criticized the Biden Administration for its bureaucratic approval process, which allowed illegal vaping products to flood the market to meet consumer demand.
Rep. Donalds: “To be clear, I’m not against Americans who want to use vaping products or tobacco products. I think it is important for the American people to understand that the previous administration did not do the job of making sure that there were products on the shelf where they could clearly understand what they were consuming or ingesting. And then you have products like this [illegal vape] that have hit the shelves in the United States, primarily because the previous administration was derelict in their duty and making sure that they were approving applications of companies in America who could supply the demand from the American consumer.”
CLICK HERE to watch the hearing.