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Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,248781,00.html
Why
would ANY politician worth their salt even listen to a lobbyist who is
paid by a drug manufacturer? Is this really how decisions are made in
Congress? Is it any different in the Australian Parliament? For those
who thought that Pork Barreling was a thing of the past, read on… (AVN
Ed).
AUSTIN, Texas — Merck & Co. is helping bankroll efforts to pass
state laws requiring girls as young as 11 or 12 to receive the
drugmaker's new vaccine against the sexually transmitted
cervical-cancer virus.
Some conservatives and parents'-rights groups say such a requirement
would encourage premarital sex and interfere with the way they raise
their children, and they say Merck's push for such laws is underhanded.
But the company said its lobbying efforts have been above-board.
With at least 18 states debating whether to require Merck's Gardasil
vaccine for schoolgirls, Merck has funneled money through Women in
Government, an advocacy group made up of female state legislators
around the country.
A top official from Merck's vaccine
division sits on Women in Government's business council, and many of
the bills around the country have been introduced by members of Women
in Government.
Merck spokeswoman Janet Skidmore would not say
how much the company is spending on lobbyists or how much it has
donated to Women in Government. Crosby also declined to specify how
much the drug company gave.
The New Jersey-based drug company
could generate billions in sales if Gardasil — at $360 for the
three-shot regimen — were made mandatory across the country.
Cathie Adams, president of the conservative watchdog group Texas Eagle
Forum, said the relationship between Merck and Women in Government is
too cozy. "What it does is benefit the pharmaceutical companies, and I
don't want pharmaceutical companies taking precedence over the
authorities of parents," she said.
Adams said Merck's method
of lobbying quietly through groups like Women in Government in addition
to meeting directly with legislators are common in state government but
still should raise eyebrows. "It's corrupt as far as I'm concerned,"
she said.
Proposals for mandates have popped up from
California to Connecticut since the first piece of legislation was
introduced in September in Michigan. Michigan's bill was narrowly
defeated last month. Lawmakers said the requirement would intrude on
families' privacy, even though, as in most states' proposals, parents
could opt out.
Even with such opt-out provisions, mandates
take away parents' rights to make medical decisions for their children,
said Linda Klepacki of the Colorado-based evangelical organization
Focus on the Family. The group contends the vaccine should be available
for parents who want it, but not forced on those who don't.
"Not everybody has equal sets of parents," said Farrar, a Houston
Democrat who had precancerous cells removed from her cervix several
years ago. "I think this is a public health issue and to not want to
eradicate cervical cancer is irresponsible."
Drug-industry
analyst Steve Brozak of W.B.B. Securities has projected Gardasil sales
of at least $1 billion per year — and billions more if states start
requiring the vaccine. "I could not think of a bigger boost," he said.
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