President Bush Urges Congress to Pass BioShield
Legislation Remarks by the President at the Bio 2003
Convention Center and Exhibition Washington Convention
Center Washington, D.C.
1:08 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thanks a lot. Welcome to the nation's capital, and
thanks for having me drop by.
I knew Tommy was here when I saw
his Harley Davidson parked out front. (Laughter.) So I just put my
Segway right next to it. (Laughter.)
It is a pleasure to be with so many leaders in such a vital
industry. Each of you is carrying on the incredible work began some
50 years ago by Doctors Watson and Crick. Since then, biotechnology
is advancing knowledge and relieving suffering. In the years to
come, the contributions of your industry will help us to win the war
on terror, will help us fight hunger around the world and will help
us to save countless lives with new medicines.
My administration is committed to working with your industry so
that the great powers of biotechnology can serve the true interests
of our nation and mankind.
Tommy Thompson is the Secretary of Health and Human Services. He
is the point man for this administration on biotechnology and other
matters of national health. And he is doing a fantastic job for
America. (Applause.) Thank you, buddy.
I want to thank Carl Feldbaum for inviting me and inviting you. I
want to thank the -- and welcome the premiers and ministers and
ambassadors and distinguished guests from around the world who are
here today. I want to thank the members of Congress who are here,
some of our nation's governors have joined us today.
I understand the Mayor is here -- I always like to see the Mayor
and remind him that potholes in front of the White House need to be
repaired on a regular basis. (Laughter.)
I appreciate my Commissioner, the man I named to head the Food
and Drug Administration, Mark McClellan, for his service to the
country. (Applause.)
The biotechnology industry finds itself on the front lines of
some of the great challenges of our time. The first challenge is the
need to fight terror. All of us know the great possibilities of
modern science, when it is guided by good and humane purposes. We
understand, as well, the terrible harm that science can do in the
hands of evil people.
On September the 11th, 2001 the world saw what terrorists could
do with commercial airliners turned into weapons of mass murder. We
know that our enemies have ambitions to acquire and use biological,
chemical and nuclear weapons. We will not sit idly by as these
threats gather, and we will continue to act before dangers are upon
us. The most direct way, the best way of removing threats to our
country is to eliminate them at their source. And that's what the
United States of America has done and we will do by waging a
focused, relentless effort to hunt down any terrorist that would
harm the United States of America and our citizens. (Applause.)
And we're making progress. We have captured or killed many key
leaders of al Qaeda. And the other one knows we're hot on their
trail. In Afghanistan and Iraq, we gave ultimatums to terror
regimes. Those regimes chose defiance, and those regimes are no
more. (Applause.)
As we take the battle to the enemy, we must always remember where
the battle began: here in our own country. So we've reorganized
government to defend the homeland -- with greater security at our
borders and ports, with more screeners at airports, and the nation's
first environmental sensors, a network of labs to quickly detect a
biological attack.
A key part of our all-out effort to prepare for the threat of
bio-terror is what this administration has called Project Bioshield.
I have proposed that our government spend nearly $6 billion over the
next 10 years to speed the research, production and availability of
effective vaccines and treatments against small pox and anthrax,
botulin toxin, E-bola plague and other possible agents of bioterror.
Under Project BioShield, the government will have the spending
authority to ensure that the most advanced vaccines and treatments
are available to our people. Project BioShield will give our
scientific leaders greater authority and more flexibility in
decisions that may affect our national security. Our labs will be
able to hire the right experts, to buy the right equipment and to
speed the construction of the right facilities to accelerate
urgently needed discoveries.
Like other great scientific efforts, Project BioShield will have
applications beyond its immediate goals. As scientists work to
defeat the weapons of bioterror, I know they will gain new insights
into the workings of other diseases. And this will also break new
ground for the search for treatments and cures.
And this, in turn, can provide great benefits for all humanity,
especially in developing countries, where infectious diseases often
go uncontrolled. Your industry must stay involved with this issue.
If you're interested in seeing more flexibility and more research
dollars for the sake of national security, I need your help in
lobbying the members of the United States Congress. And the message
is clear: for the sake of our national security, the United States
Congress must pass the BioShield legislation as soon as possible.
(Applause.)
Your industry is also helping this country and the world to meet
a second great challenge: sparing millions of people from
starvation. America and other wealthy nations have a special
responsibility to combat hunger and disease in desperate lands. We
meet that responsibility with emergency food in times of crisis.
Next year the United States will devote more than a billion dollars
providing food and aid to the hungry. But for the long-term, we must
help troubled nations to avert famine by sharing with them the most
advance methods of crop production.
Through the work of scientists in your field, many farmers in
developed nations are able to grow crops with high resistance to
drought and pests and disease; enable farmers to produce far greater
yields per acre. In our own country, we see the benefits of biotech
every day with food prices and good land conservation practices.
Yet, the great advantages of biotechnology have yet to reach
developing nations in Africa and other lands where these innovations
are now most needed.
Acting on unfounded, unscientific fears, many European
governments have blocked the import of all new biotech crops.
Because of these artificial obstacles many African nations avoid
investing in biotechnology, worried that their products will be shut
out of important European markets.
For the sake of a continent threatened by famine I urge the
European governments to end their opposition to biotechnology.
(Applause.)
We should encourage the spread of safe, effective biotechnology
to win the fight against global hunger. (Applause.)
Finally, your industry is in the forefront of improving health
care for all Americans, and we are grateful. Thanks to
biotechnology, we may soon be able to grow life-saving therapies and
useful chemicals in plants. Biotechnology might allow scientists to
produce large amounts of monoclonal antibodies, which target
specific, disease-causing molecules without attacking healthy cells.
We're closing in on the ability to protect and fight against a range
of illnesses, including cancer, and HIV and heart disease.
In coming years we will see further innovations, like insulin,
that can be inhaled rather than administered by a needle. Men and
women in your field are at work on synthetic blood that is free from
infections and capable of being administered to all blood types. New
therapies are nearing which will enable doctors to look at diseases
for genetic markers and then give patients individualized
treatments. The future of medicine in the United States of America
is incredibly bright because of your work and your skill and your
research.
Our biotechnology industry is the strongest in the world, and we
need to keep it that way. (Applause.)
And now we have a challenge to make sure that many of the
advances you have made in making sure out health care system can be
world-class is extended to all Americans, especially our senior
citizens. (Applause.)
The Medicare system has served seniors well for nearly four
decades. Yet, while medicine has dramatically advanced, Medicare
hasn't. The program was designed at a time when hospital stays were
common and drug therapies were rare. Thanks to your efforts, there
are drugs and other treatments that can dramatically reduce hospital
stays which, in turn, improves quality of care and quality of life.
We have a responsibility to improve and strengthen Medicare by
making modern medicine an integral part of the Medicare system, and
that includes prescription drugs for all our seniors. (Applause.)
This is a goal you have supported for several years. And if we
finally put aside partisan politics and focus on what's right for
American seniors, I believe we can achieve the goal this year.
(Applause.)
The debate is on in the United States Congress. And I've
submitted a framework for reform that insists that our seniors have
choices under Medicare so that affordable health care plans compete
for their business and give them the coverage they need, not the
coverage that a Washington bureaucrat thinks they need. (Applause.)
The principle of choice, of trusting people to make their own
health care decisions is behind the health plan enjoyed by every
person on the federal payroll, including the members of the United
States Congress. All federal employees get to choose their health
care plan. Health care plans compete for their business. Members of
Congress have got excellent choices. If the choice idea is good
enough for the lawmakers, it ought to be good enough for the seniors
of the United States of America. (Applause.)
Seniors who want to stay in the current Medicare system should
have that option, plus a new prescription drug benefit. Seniors who
want enhanced benefits, such as more coverage for their preventative
care and other services should have that choices, as well. Seniors
who like the affordability of managed care plans should be able to
enroll in them. And low-income seniors should receive extra help, so
that all seniors will have the ability to choose a Medicare option
that includes prescription drug benefits.
As we pursue Medicare reform, we must make sure that whatever
system evolves does not undermine America's biotechnology industry.
We need to keep rewarding innovation and protecting competition
without unnecessary intervention by the government. When the
government determines which drugs are covered by health insurance
and which illnesses are treated, patients face delays and inflexible
limits on coverage. That is a fact. Medicine works best when doctors
and their patients decide what treatments to pursue. (Applause.)
We're making progress on this important issue. The House
committee has marked up legislation. The Senate is actively debating
the issue on the floor. We have a chance to finally modernize
Medicare, and I ask for your help. Please contact your senators and
members of the United States House of Representatives, ask them to
take a tough vote, if need be, to modernize a system which needs to
be saved.
And as you make your voices heard on necessary reform for
Medicare, make sure you make your voices heard on making sure that
we have legal reform in America, as well. We sue each other too much
in the United States of America. (Applause.)
We passed a medical liability reform bill and a class action
reform bill out of the House of Representatives. These bills are
stuck in the United States Senate. For the sake of a balanced legal
system, we need tort reform in Washington, D.C. (Applause.) And I
call upon the United States Senate to act, to pass meaningful
liability and class action suit reforms now. (Applause.)
These are times of great challenge for this country. Our country
must continue to meet the grave dangers of bioterrorism. We've got
to continue to work to help relieve suffering around the world. And
we've got to continue to seek cures to terrible diseases. In all of
this, we're relying on the skill and conscience of scientists in the
field of biotechnology.
As men and women of science you have accepted a moral calling to
improve lives and to save lives. That calling also requires a deep
respect for the value of every life. Because even the most noble
ends do not justify any means. This nation is counting on your to
serve the true interests of all humanity. You face great challenges,
yet you're an industry who welcomes challenge. Your hard work and
inspiration have produced incredible successes. You have made us all
proud. After all, millions of people are in your debt. The American
people are grateful for your many achievements and we look forward
to the many achievements yet to come.
May God bless your work, and may God continue to bless America.
(Applause.)