Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Lawmakers Aim To Modernize Nation's Medical Supply Chain
The U.S. needs to review and overhaul its medical supply chains amid the pandemic, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle said Tuesday. Speaking at The Hill's "America's Agenda: COVID-19 & A Responsive Rx Supply Chain" event, Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) said the U.S. needs "a soup-to-nuts look and identification of the very specific supply chains with national security importance.鈥 (Bautista, 10/27)
Voters blame President Trump and congressional Republicans slightly more than their Democratic counterparts over the inability of Washington to reach a deal on a coronavirus relief package before Election Day, according to a new survey. In聽the聽Morning Consult poll released Wednesday, 45 percent of voters said they chiefly聽blame Trump and Republicans in Congress for the stimulus impasse, while 40 percent said they blame congressional Democrats.聽Fifteen percent said they were unsure or had no opinion. (Bowden, 10/28)
In other news from Capitol Hill 鈥
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has been hospitals' fiercest advocate in Congress and may soon rise to one of the most powerful perches in Washington, which could have important implications for healthcare policy. "If I were a hospital leader right now, I would be dancing for joy at the prospect of Schumer becoming the majority leader," a healthcare lobbyist said. (Cohrs, 10/28)
Even in an election year dominated by a deadly pandemic and President Trump鈥檚 chaotic first term, Democrats in North Carolina are talking, unceasingly, about drug prices. In a brutal series of attack ads, Democrats have painted incumbent Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican, as a pro-pharma shill, even calling him 鈥減harma鈥檚 favorite senator.鈥 (Facher, 10/28)
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) on Tuesday outlined a broad and ambitious legislative agenda for 2021, predicting Democrats will have unified power to move the party's priorities on issues as varied as health care, infrastructure, climate change and gun reform.聽"I think we're going to deal with all of those 鈥 and more," he said on a call with reporters. (Lillis, 10/27)
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) declared his health is 鈥渏ust fine鈥 Tuesday as he declined to explain photographs last week showing his hands bruised and bandaged. The 78-year-old dismissed the issue as a media fixation, despite his own history of health issues related to his heart and a serious fall last year that left him out of the public eye for five weeks. 鈥淚 can just tell you that I鈥檓 just fine. And I can鈥檛 believe y鈥檃ll have played with that all week long,鈥 McConnell said in a telephone interview as he traveled back to Kentucky for the final week of a reelection campaign in which he is asking voters for a seventh, six-year term. (Kane, 10/27)