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Friday, Jun 24 2016

Full Issue

White House Blasts Republican Zika Bill As 'Totally Inadequate,' Threatens Veto

The upper chamber has promised to kill the legislation anyway, and with only a few working days left before the August recess where both the House and Senate are in Washington, it doesn't look like funding negotiations will be settled soon.

The White House Thursday promised that President Barack Obama would veto the long-delayed response of the Republican-controlled Congress to the president's request for fighting the Zika virus, saying it provided too little money and contained too many partisan provisions. The $1.1 billion measure had already appeared sure to die in the Senate next at the hands of filibustering Democrats backing Obama's $1.9 billion request and opposing spending cuts that House Republicans added to the measure. (6/23)

White House principal deputy press secretary Eric Schultz ... called the $1.1 billion deal 鈥渢otally inadequate,鈥 saying that Republican lawmakers had turned a public health issue into a partisan political exercise. 鈥淲e urge Republicans to stop turning this into a political football and actually get to work, come up with a proposal that鈥檚 going to serve the American people,鈥 Mr. Schultz said. Mr. Schultz ticked through a list of problems with the measure that passed the House, raising objections to what he said was insufficient funding. The bill also would 鈥渟teal money鈥 from other public-health priorities, he said, cutting unused funds from the Affordable Care Act, funds to fight Ebola and money from the Health and Human Services Department. (Armour and McCain Nelson, 6/23)

The administration also criticized the bill for limiting contraception access for women seeking to prevent Zika, which can be spread through unprotected sex. (Rampton and Cornwell, 6/23)

Senate Democrats say the bill is all but doomed in the upper chamber, where it will need support from members of their party to pass. Lawmakers and aides say that would be extremely unlikely after Democratic lawmakers were dropped from the previously bipartisan talks. (Ferris, 6/23)

[Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell] chided Democrats for having 鈥減hony excuses鈥 to oppose the bill. 鈥淒emocrats should work with us to pass Zika control funding again, not block funding for combatting this virus,鈥 he said in a Senate floor speech. 鈥淧hony excuses and made-up objections to the funding we鈥檝e already passed won鈥檛 help create a vaccine or eradicate the threat of Zika.鈥 (Scott, 6/23)

The House isn't scheduled to return from recess until July 5. That leaves the House and Senate just a few work days when they鈥檙e both scheduled to be in Washington until both chambers depart until Labor Day. (Ehley and Haberkorn, 6/23)

The Obama administration says the Zika virus is the nation鈥檚 next big public health threat. But there is continuing disagreement on how much money it will take to counter it and where that money will come from. And delays in reconciling those visions could be forestalling needed intervention to head off the mosquito-borne virus, whose rapid spread globally has for months fueled concerns. (Luthra, updated 6/23)

Media outlets also offer coverage of Zika news in the states聽鈥

One thing was clear when Virginia Health Commissioner Dr. Marissa Levine spoke to the state Senate Finance Committee about the Zika virus Thursday: A lot remains unclear about the virus, making prevention all the more important. ... Twenty-seven Virginians have been infected with the virus, the Virginia Department of Health鈥檚 website reported Thursday. That marks the fifth consecutive week the number has increased. Last week, the website showed that 26 residents in the state had been infected. (Demeria, 6/23)

The number of Zika cases have been steadily climbing in Florida since the state began reporting them in early February, and they passed the 200 count this week. As of Thursday, there were 213 cases of travel-related Zika in Florida, 40 of which are in pregnant women. (Miller, 6/23)

Ten people in Dallas County have Zika, and 10 pregnant women have "possible infection" with the virus, health officials said Thursday. The latest person to test positive for the virus is a 55-year-old Irving resident who traveled to Guatemala recently, the Dallas County Department Health and Human Services said in a news release. (Rajwani and Yasmin, 6/23)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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