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The high cost of
prescription drugs are a serious matter,
especially to cash-strapped seniors.
Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe has introduced
legislation in Congress that would allow the
importation of drugs from Canada and Europe,
where the government negotiates for lower
prices.
New Hampshire Sen. Judd Gregg has introduced a
competing bill, which should be called
importation-lite and better fits the agenda of
the Republican leadership in the Senate.
On Tuesday, the two ran into each other in an
usually tense exchange between two senators from
the same party. Gregg accused Snowe of trying to
create a "Russian roulette regime in the name of
politics," according to The Washington Post.
Snowe stood her ground and shot back at her
colleague.
Playing politics?
Playing politics is when a Republican Congress
passes a law adding a prescription drug benefit
to Medicare without considering its true cost
and then purposefully prohibits the federal
government from negotiating lower prices with
drug makers.
Importing prescription drugs from Canada and
Europe is a roundabout, temporary solution to
high drug costs. But it at least gives people an
option that makes their medicine more
affordable.
Already, drugs are being imported by consumers
desperate for a better deal, only now there's no
regulation or protections.
Snowe's bill adds safeguards to an already
common practice. Both she and her legislation
deserve more respect from Gregg. |
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