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Friday, March 7, 2025

CDC launches ‘conflicts of interest’ page about vaccine advisory panel

 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published a webpage Friday listing the conflicts of interest reported by members of a key vaccine advisory committee.

Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. hailed it as another step toward “radical transparency,” while one former member of the panel called it a “distraction.”

The CDC’s new web tool lists all the declared conflicts of interest for the outside expert members of the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) since 2000. Across the nearly 40 current and former voting members of the ACIP, roughly 200 items are listed, though not all are necessarily conflicts of interest.

ACIP voting member Yvonne Maldonado, professor of pediatrics and epidemiology and population health at Stanford University, has two items listed under her name but one is explicitly stated to represent “no conflict of interest.” The item instead is a note relaying she had previously served on the data and safety monitoring board for Pfizer meningococcal vaccine trials and served in similar roles for other vaccine trials.

Kennedy, who spent decades casting doubt on the efficacy and safety of vaccines before ascending to his current role, shared the new webpage on social platform X, thanking the CDC for its “commitment to radical transparency,” a term he has adapted as a motto for his tenure atop the Health and Human Services Department.

One week after he was confirmed, a key ACIP meeting in February was postponed with no new date given.

One former ACIP member told The Hill the webpage represents “nothing new.”

“I heard they were going to do this. There’s nothing new,” said Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “This has always been available to the public.”

Offit served as a member of ACIP from 1998 to 2003. Under his name are 8 items listed, most noting that he is the co-holder of several vaccine patents.

“When we sit down to begin a meeting, we go around the room and we declare anything that would be could be perceived as a conflict of interest,” Offit said.

“I think it’s just a distraction,” he added, noting the current threats of measles outbreaks in Texas and New Mexico.

“I think RFK Jr. believes that the pharmaceutical industry has captured committees like the ACIP or the FDA vaccine advisory committee, for which he has no evidence. But it sells in the current climate, this notion of conspiracy, that there’s dark forces working behind the scenes to do harm.”

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/5183223-cdc-vaccine-advisory-committee-conflicts/

Ontario will tariff electricity going to 3 US states on Monday, premier says

 Ontario Premier Doug Ford said three states would face tariffs on electricity after a week of President Trump’s swipes at Canada with fluctuating trade policies. 

“I love Americans. It’s been 20 years of my life. But in saying that, no, we’re going to put a 25 percent tariff on electricity coming from Ontario to Michigan, New York and Minnesota,” Ford said during a Thursday appearance on Fox Business Network’s “The Claman Countdown.”

The leader said new tariffs are scheduled to be implemented Monday in an effort to push back on Trump’s international economic measures.

“And isn’t this a shame? It’s an absolute mess. He’s created chaos. He ran on a mandate. The lower cost, lower inflation, create more jobs. It’s the total opposite,” Ford said. 

“You know, people are going to be losing their jobs in the U.S. and in Canada, and inflation is happening already,” he added. 

Ford said tariffs will only hurt families on both sides of the border.

“The market is going downhill quicker than the American bobsled team right now, and it’s unacceptable,” he told anchor Liz Claman. 

“The situation he has put American families in, Canadian families and around the world, it’s just going to hurt,” Ford continued.

Trump originally imposed 25 percent tariffs on most imports from Canada and Mexico on Tuesday but said the North American tariffs would be paused for a month on Thursday. 

Both countries have threatened to enforce reciprocal tariffs alongside China, which will also face higher levies on imports due to Trump’s policies.

Businesses are expected to see an increase in costs for outsourcing production, which will likely impact consumers.

The White House and governors of Michigan, New York and Minnesota did not immediately respond to The Hill’s request for comment.

https://thehill.com/policy/international/5181540-ontario-will-tariff-electricity-going-to-3-us-states-on-monday-premier-says/

Noem says DHS has ID’d, will seek prosecution of ‘criminal leakers’

 Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Friday that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has identified two “criminal leakers” within its ranks and will refer them to the Department of Justice for felony prosecutions.

“We have identified criminal leakers within @DHSgov and are preparing to refer these perpetrators to the @TheJusticeDept for felony prosecutions. These individuals face up to 10 years in federal prison,” she wrote in a post on the social platform X along with a video message.

“We plan to prosecute these two individuals and hold them accountable for what they have done,” Noem announced in the video, saying that they leaked the department’s operations and put law enforcement officials’ lives at risk.

The names of the individuals have not been revealed.

Last month, Tom Homan, President Trump’s  “border czar,” said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions in Colorado were hindered after a raid was “leaked,” allowing the targets to escape.

“Everybody can agree to that, but when they get a heads-up that we are coming, it’s only a matter of time before our officers are ambushed,” he added, according to The Associated Press. “Their job is dangerous enough. So we are going to address this very seriously.”

ICE officers were still able to carry out some arrests. The agency has been actively documenting its deportation efforts through social media. 

The Hill reached out to DHS for comment.

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5183306-dhs-noem-raid-leakers/

Federal Dependency Is A Ticking-Time-Bomb For State-Budgets

 by Vance Ginn via TheDailyEconomy.org,

Imagine finishing high school and realizing that no matter what path you take - college, a job, or starting a business - your money doesn’t go as far as it should. 

Your car loan is more expensive, rent keeps rising, and groceries cost more monthly. 

If you go to college, tuition is higher; if you don’t, more of your paycheck disappears in taxes. 

This isn’t just bad luck - it’s the result of reckless government spending that fuels inflation, drives up interest rates, and makes it harder for everyone to get ahead.

In fiscal year 2023, federal funds to state and local governments totaled $1.1 trillion, nearly one-fifth of all federal spending and 4 percent of US GDP. This money doesn’t come free — it’s taken from taxpayers, borrowed from future generations, or printed by the Federal Reserve, creating inflation.

Even states that claim to be fiscally conservative are hooked on federal money. Texas took in $102 billion for its 2024-2025 budget, nearly one-third of its total budget. That means Texas, like all states that average 36 percent of their budget from federal funds, is highly tied to federal mandates for what it wants to do.

The biggest driver of this dependency is Medicaid, which received $616 billion in federal spending in 2023, over half of all federal funds to states. Many states expanded Medicaid with temporary federal funds, but when Washington inevitably pulls back, states will be forced to raise taxes, cut services, or both, burdening many families. The same pattern applies to federally backed education and transportation spending. 

The more states rely on Washington, the less control they have over their policies.

This isn’t just about wasteful spending — it directly hits American households. More deficit spending contributes to higher interest rates, making mortgages, student loans, and car payments more expensive. The Fed buying Treasury debt to keep interest rates lower by increasing the money supply creates inflation, forcing families to stretch their scarce budgets further. 

Every dollar the federal government spends on state programs is taken from the economy, where businesses and individuals could have put it to far more productive use. The ongoing budget fight in Washington makes one thing clear: states can’t count on federal funds forever. 

Through the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), President Trump and Elon Musk have started freezing wasteful grants and unnecessary spending — steps that should have happened long ago. 

Critics claim this is an overreach, but the real issue is decades of reckless spending leading to a $36 trillion national debt and a Congress unwilling to act.

The Keynesian idea that government spending fuels growth is a myth. Milton Friedman warned that spending is a cost, not a benefit. Every dollar Washington spends is taken from the productive private sector, where real wealth and innovation are created. More government spending crowds out private investment, reduces productivity, and leaves taxpayers with higher costs.

States that are the most dependent on federal aid — Louisiana, Alaska, and New Mexico, where over 50 percent of revenue to cover their budgets comes from Washington — also tend to have some of the weakest economies. The more states rely on federal funds, the less incentive they have to keep taxes low, cut regulations, and encourage private investment.

Trump’s spending freezes have upset politicians who depend on federal funds to prop up bloated budgets, but the real issue is that states allowed themselves to become dependent.

Excluding federal funds, state spending has grown by 61.1 percent from 2014 to 2023, far outpacing the 31 percent in compounded population growth plus inflation. But of course, much of that state spending increase is matched by as much, if not more, in federal funds, creating perverse incentives for states to spend more. But excluding federal funds from state spending over that decade helps to remove much of the increase in federal funds to states for those states that expanded Medicaid. Ultimately, had states kept their spending in check, they could have saved taxpayers $454 billion in 2023.

With Washington facing a growing debt crisis, states must act now to prepare for less federal funding. 

That starts with transparency — understanding exactly how much money comes from Washington, where it goes, and which programs will be at risk when federal dollars dry up. Then, states must rein in spending, eliminate inefficiencies, and take back control over education, healthcare, and transportation so they are not at the mercy of federal strings.

Some states are already moving in the right direction. 

Nearly a dozen — including Oklahoma, Louisiana, Iowa, Texas, and Florida — have launched a DOGE to expose waste and inefficiency. Oklahoma’s Division of Government Efficiency has already uncovered millions in unnecessary spending, providing accountability for spending with taxpayer money.

Long-term spending relief, however, requires Congress and state legislatures to act. While Trump and DOGE are taking steps, only Congress can make these cuts permanent. Without legislative action, future administrations could reverse spending freezes. Lawmakers who claim to be fiscal conservatives must prove it.

Some states have already shown that spending restraint works. Alaska, Colorado, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Wyoming have kept their entire budget growth below inflation and population growth over the last decade, ensuring taxpayers aren’t overburdened. Others, like Louisiana, Massachusetts, and North Carolina, have slowed state spending growth below this key rate but remain too dependent on federal funds that grew more rapidly.

The Sustainable Budget Project by Americans for Tax Reform found that if governments had capped federal and state spending growth at population growth and inflation, taxpayers could have saved $2.5 trillion in 2023. That money could have been invested in businesses, used to create jobs, or saved for the future. Instead, excessive spending has made our lives more difficult.

Rising interest rates and national debt will eventually force Congress to reduce spending, leaving states with two painful choices: massive tax hikes or severe service cuts. There are no more excuses. Congress must spend less. To prepare for this inevitability, states must spend less, reject federal money with strings attached, and embrace free-market principles before it’s too late.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/federal-dependency-ticking-time-bomb-state-budgets

DexCom receives warning letter from FDA, sees no impact to FY25 guidance

 In a regulatory filing, DexCom (DXCM) disclosed that on March 4, the company received a warning letter from the U.S. FDA following inspections of the company’s facilities in San Diego, California, and Mesa, Arizona. In the warning letter, the FDA cited deficiencies in the response letters sent by the company to the FDA following the Form 483, List of Investigational Observations, which was delivered to the company in connection with the inspection of the San Diego facility that occurred from October 21, 2024 through November 7, 2024, and the inspection of the Mesa, Arizona facility that occurred from June 10, 2024 through June 14, 2024. The warning letter describes observed non-conformities in manufacturing processes and quality management system. The warning letter does not restrict the company’s ability to produce, market, manufacture or distribute products, require recall of any products, nor restrict the company’s ability to seek FDA 510(k) clearance of new products. The company takes the matters identified in the warning letter seriously, has already submitted several responses to the Form 483 and is in the process of preparing a written response to the warning letter. The company intends to continue to undertake certain corrections and corrective actions and will also continue to provide regular updates to the FDA in response to the Form 483. The company cannot, however, give any assurances that the FDA will be satisfied with its response or as to the expected date of the resolution of the matters included in the warning letter. Until the issues cited in the warning letter are resolved to the FDA’s satisfaction, additional legal or regulatory action may be taken without further notice. DexCom does not expect a material impact from the warning letter described above to the company’s manufacturing capacity or the fiscal year 2025 guidance for revenue previously issued on February 13.

https://www.tipranks.com/news/the-fly/dexcom-receives-warning-letter-from-fda-sees-no-impact-to-fy25-guidance

US State Dept employee arrested on conspiracy charges related to defense information

 The U.S. Justice Department said on Friday that a State Department employee was arrested on criminal charges related to alleged participation in a conspiracy to gather, transmit, or lose national defense information.

The State Department employee, who works in Washington, held a top secret security clearance and had access to information up to the secret level within his department workspace, the Justice Department said in a statement.

https://www.investing.com/news/general-news/us-state-dept-employee-arrested-on-conspiracy-charges-related-to-defense-information-3916154

Dems Fight To Protect A $600 Billion Medicaid Tax Scam That Joe Biden Tried To Kill

 Before Texas’ embarrassment of a congressman, Al Green, was kicked out of the House chamber during President Donald Trump’s address on Tuesday, he shouted “You have no mandate to cut Medicaid!” while pointing a cane at Trump.

Green is dead wrong. Trump does have a mandate. And it comes from none other than Joe Biden.

Republicans are looking at substantial spending cuts to help reduce the nearly $2 trillion deficit and keep the economy moving. And one big, fat, juicy target for savings is a Medicaid funding scam that lets states steal tens of billions of dollars from the federal government every year.

Here’s how this particular scam works.

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States tax health care providers and use those funds to help cover their Medicaid costs. Then, the states turn around and increase what they pay these same providers for Medicaid benefits – effectively covering the cost of the tax. Then, because of the way Medicaid is financed, the states can bill the federal government for half of the spending increase.

Let’s say, for example, a state imposes a provider tax on hospitals that raises $100 million. And then it returns that $100 million to the hospitals in the form of higher Medicaid reimbursement rates. There’s been no increase in benefits. Providers aren’t better off. But the state gets an extra $50 million from the federal government’s matching fund, money that it can use for anything it wants. (The fed pays states up to 90% to cover the cost of expanding Medicaid under Obamacare.)

An Oregon state representative once called it a “dream tax.” States can use Medicaid to steal money from the federal treasury. It’s such a wonderful dream that Alaska is the only state in the nation that hasn’t leveraged it.

We’re not talking pennies here. The Congressional Budget Office figures that the 10-year cost of this tax scam is more than $600 billion, which is almost exactly what Republicans are eyeing in savings from Medicaid. Provider taxes are now the second largest source of funds for Medicaid.

Take California, which is the premier abuser of this scam. The state’s budget projects $119 billion in federal Medicaid funds – more than Florida’s entire budget – an increase of $11 billion from the prior year.  American Commitment President Phil Kerpen notes that the increase alone is bigger than Nevada’s entire state budget.

 

And California makes clear who is picking up the tab, talking about a tax it imposes on state insurers: “While the tax is charged to health insurance plans, most of the burden of the cost of paying the tax falls on the federal government.

This isn’t a new problem, either, and it’s one that both Democrats and Republicans have tried to fix for decades.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, states using this gimmick pushed federal Medicaid spending up by 20% a year, resulting in a 1991 law aimed at curtailing the practice. But it didn’t work. From 2008 to 2015, for example, provider tax revenue doubled and the federal share of Medicaid spending climbed from 57% to 63%.

“Both George W. Bush and the Obama administrations recognized the problem of provider taxes and proposed limiting the amount that states could raise through them,” noted Brian Blase in a 2016 article published in Forbes.

Now, here’s the kicker.

In Bob Woodward’s 2011 book, “The Price of Politics,” he writes about budget negotiations during the Obama administration and notes that Republicans brought up the issue of Medicaid provider taxes with then-Vice President Joe Biden. Here’s how Woodward recounts the scene:

It’s a scam, Biden agreed. The states were gaming the system, taxing doctors and hospitals so they could get federal reimbursements and then returning the money to providers. Let’s call it like it is, and let’s just do this … It could save $40 billion. ‘If we can’t do this,’ the vice president said, ‘come on!’

Someone needs to ask Green – and by extension the rest of today’s corrupt Democratic party – why he’s willing to face congressional censure to defend a $600 billion tax scam that even Joe Biden has decried. Maybe follow Green around the Capitol, screaming the question while waving a cane in his face.

https://issuesinsights.com/2025/03/07/dems-fight-to-protect-a-600-bil-medicaid-tax-scam-that-joe-biden-tried-to-kill/