Philip Morris
Who Is Happiest Politician in Washington Over Whitewater? Alfonse D'amato - Newt Gingrich - David Kessler?
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- Bogdanich, W.
- Clinton, W.
- Damato, A.
- Douglas, C.
- Elders, J.
- Gingrich, N.
- Kessler, D.
- Martin, J.
- Mcdonald, R.
- Ohara, J.
- Xxhillary <Clinton, H.>
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- 2046936726/6992
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- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
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Document Images
Food & Drug
Insider Report
March 21, 1994
Volume 4, No. 5
Who is Happiest
Politician in
Washington Over
Whitewater?
Alfonse D'Amato - Newt
Gingrich - David Kessler?
.
Inside the
Insider Report
Whitewater Drowns Clintons, Buoys
Up Kessler : . . . . . . . . . . 1. . 2
Hillary Clinton Drug Stock Investments
Under Scrutiny. . . . . . . 5
Federal Register Notices ....... 6
Kessler Gets Low
Job Approval Ratings ......... 10
FDA Insider Report FAXPoll ..... 12
For Your Subscription
Call (703) 709-1224
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P.O. Box 1846, Herndon, Virginia 22071 ,
K.R. Pearson, Publisher and Editor

N
March 21,1994 ~ Page 2 Volume 4, No. 5
Whitewater Drowns Clintons,
- Buoy's Up Kessler
Whenever you make a colossal mistake, the
first thing you hope is that nobody saw you
make it. Your second wish, and it is one that
often is nothing more than a fantasy, is that the
error will not be noticed because someone else
has committed an even bigger blunder that
makes your mistake seem small and trivial by
comparison.
David Kessler had his fantasy come true when
he stepped into quicksand with the nicotine
issue, only to have the whole controversy play
out against the backdrop of an ever-expanding
Whitewater controversy that has immersed Bill
and Hillary in their own problems. It would
be difficult to argue that anyone in Washington
might be happier than Senator Alfonse
~ D'Amato (R-New York) or House Whip Newt
Gingrich (R-Georgia) over the now roaring
Whitewater river of controversy.
But just as the Whitewater mess was building
to critical mass and threatening to flow over its
banks, David Kessler jumped head first into
his own whirlpool of controversy. Kessler
penned a letter to an anti-smoking activist in
which he offered the opinion that cigarettes
may be considered to be drug-delivery devices
subject to the full regulatory weight and
authority of FDA. Kessler's claim for such
oversight is premised on reports that cigarette
manufacturers have been modifying nicotine
levels in their products to maintain addictive
levels.
But a typically sordid tale is now emerging
about why this long-simmering issue has been
placed squarely on the front burner at FDA.
~ Day One, an ABC news magazine show, had
reportedly been attempting to convince Kessler
to agree to an interview on a story they had
been researching on artificial manipulation of
nicotine levels by cigarette manufacturers.
FDA Insiders in the Commissioner's Office
report the initial reaction by advisors was to
keep Kessler away from this issue because it is
far too explosive an issue politically. Day One
producers took the unusual step of sharing the
research data they had accumulated as an
inducement for Kessler to grant them an
interview.
The conflict within FDA was a classic one.
Staffers quickly picked sides and began to
develop arguments to support their respective
positions. Risk analysis evaluations were made
weighing the relative hazards versus rewards
of taking one position or another. Policy
wonks engaged in numerous debates trying to
refine a recommendation, and the issue soon
became all-consuming among top staffers at
FDA. This process does not, as one might
easily conclude, describe the process by which
a policy position is developed at FDA. The
issue focused solely on the merits and
disadvantages to David Kessler personally of
appearing on the show to discuss allegations of
nicotine manipulation by cigarette
manufacturers. Concerns about the public
health were simply not a part of the debate.
In the end, a compromise was reached and a
delicate game plan was developed to
implement a protective public image strike for
Commissioner Kessler. A key part of that
strategy was to determine the timing of the
Day One story. One staffer claimed his
impression was the story was going to air
©Copyright 1994 CAPITOL INSIDERS, Inc. - PHOTOCOPYING ILLEGAL
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Marcll 21, 1994
within days, and so the gears
of the public relations team at
FDA kicked into high gear.
A call was made to Day One
to ask about the proposed
date of airing for the story.
The FDA staffer called on
Thursday, February 24 under
the guise of checking whether
time remained for Kessler to
be interviewed. Day One
jumped at the bait, and
confirmed the story was
going to air on Monday.
That required FDA to push
for approval of the letter to
the anti-smoking group for
release the next news day,
Friday. Waiting for release
until the following Monday
would not provide sufficient
cover for Kessler when the
Day One story might raise
questions why Kessler was
not acting on the information
the story contained damning
the cigarette industry. In
advance of the letter being
released, calls were placed to
producers of news shows and
newspapers to assure the
story would be given high
priority. When FDA released
the Kessler letter on Friday,
Kessler had seized the high
ground of claiming a deep
concern for the public health
interest, but was deferring to
the U.S. Congress for
authority to proceed against
the tobacco industry. It was,
from a purely political
standpoint, a master stroke of
genius for Kessler. But no
(continued on page 5)
Page 3
Smoking Out the Story
Washington Post, 3/3/94
Howard Kurtz
Volume 4, No. 5
The Food and Drug Administration has used a neat bit of spin control
to beat ABC at its own game.
"Day One," the ABC magazine show, had spent almost a year
investigating allegations that tobacco companies artificially manipulate the
nicotine levels in cigarettes to increase their addictive quality. ABC reporters
shared their findings, disputed by the industry, with the FDA months ago in an
effort to land an interview with Commissioner David Kessler.
Kessler, undoubtedly concerned about the issue's political sensitivity,
declined repeated requests to appear on camera. But last Thursday,
according to ABC sources, a top Kessler aide called "Day One" and asked if
the cigarette segment was set for the following Monday. ABC confirmed that
it was and began promoting the story that night.
On Friday, the FDA released a Kessler statement announcing that
the agency is prepared to consider regulating tobacco products on grounds
that manufacturers may intend to use the nicotine content as a drug. Rather
than appearing defensive on television, Kessler reaped plenty of favorable
publicity, including front-page stories in the New York Times and Los Angeles
Times and similar reports in The Washington Post, the Washington Times,
Newsday and the Wall Street Journal, and on ABC's "World News Tonight"
and "NBC Nightly News."
Some ABC staffers were, well, smoking mad. Correspondent John
Martin told viewers that the FDA had issued its statement after "learning of
our'Day One' broadcast tonight."
"While I wish the FDA would not have tried to steal our thunder, I'm
not angry at them," said Walt Bogdanich, the former Wall Street Journal
reporter who produced the "Day One" piece. "I wish they would have gone on
the air with us. But that doesn't mean I don't greatly admire what they've
done."
Cliff Douglas of the American Cancer Society, a key source for the
ABC broadcast, said the FDA "did not want a TV program to beat them to the
punch. They did everything they could to get this letter together and run it by
the White House before ABC ran its program. It was a preemptive strike."
But FDA spokesman James O'Hara said that "this issue was being
debated within the agency before we were contacted by ABC... . We just
wrote the letter when we were ready to write the letter. The timing of the
letter and the show are coincidental."
©Copyright 1994 CAPITOL INSIDERS, Inc. - PHOTOCOPYING ILLEGAL
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1
Mar!qh.21,1994
"C .
Page 4
Scheming and Scamming at the FDA
Washington Times, 3/6/93
Editorial Page
It definitely was not a good week for smokers.
First, McDonald's announced it would ban smoking in all
of its 1,400 company-owned restaurants. Then U.S.
Surgeon-General Joycelyn Elders unleashed another of
her broadsides against smoking, this one aimed at
young people who light up. Finally, the Food and Drug
Administration, not to be outdone by Ronald McDonald
and Dr. Elders, came up with a devilish stratagem to
increase its own power and interfere even further with
the private preferences of smokers. Indeed, the FDA
plan threatens to be the most onerous of all, and it
shows how big government and dubious science ally
with each other at the expense of private rights and
property.
The FDA exists to regulate food and drugs --
drugs, that is, in the sense of pharmaceuticals rather
than narcotics. The reason it has never regulated
cigarettes and other tobacco products is -- obviously --
that they are neither food nor drugs. Except that now
maybe they are.
New research being peddled by the FDA and
the anti-smoking lobby claims that the cigarette
companies artificially manipulate the level of nicotine in
cigarettes so as to ensure that cigarette smokers remain
addicted to them and keep buying them. The evidence
for this claim seems to be not very compelling, and it is
categorically denied by the cigarette companies
themselves. But it's important, because if it were true,
the FDA would have a legal basis for regulating tobacco.
The legal basis would lie in the legislative
language that authorizes the FDA and its regulation of
drugs. Under that language, the FDA can regulate a
substance if the seller of the substance intends that it be
used as a drug -- "for therapeutic or diagnostic"
purposes or "to affect the structure or function of the
body." If the cigarette companies are manipulating the
level of nicotine in their products so as to induce people
to smoke for the drug effects of nicotine, then there
would be a legal basis for FDA regulation of tobacco.
This strategy -- more properly, scheme -- was
explicitly laid out in a letter from FDA Commissioner
David Kessler to the anti-smoking zealots of the
"Coalition on Smoking OR Health," as it calls itself.
"Evidence brought to our attention is accumulating that
suggests that cigarette manufacturers may intend that
their product contain nicotine ...to achieve drug effects
in some smokers," Mr. Kessler wrote. If so, FDA
regulation of such tobacco products "could mean,
ultimately, removal from the market of tobacco products"
containing addictive levels of nicotine. In short, the
evidence that tobacco companies are manipulating
nicotine levels in their products is conveniently pegged
to extending the power of a federal bureaucracy and to
pushing the political agenda of the anti-smoking lobby.
One reason why this scheme is being devised
now is that the Clinton Administration's earlier plan to
wipe out smoking by raising taxes on cigarettes to
prohibitive levels is becoming a cropper. The effort to
pass such a tax would involve a bruising battle with the
tobacco lobby, not to speak of consumers who don't
want to pay the taxes. Hence, it's much easier to pad
the scientific evidence and use the bureaucracy to do
what can't be passed in Congress.
The scientific merits of anti-smokers' claims
about what the tobacco companies are doing need to be
evaluated, but with strong doubt already being cast on
the anti-smoking lobby's claims about "Environmental
Tobacco Smoke," with the obvious political motivations
of the lobby and with the obvious political utility of the
new claims, citizens and taxpayers -- and, not least,
smokers -- are entitled to greet the new scheme
skeptically. It looks too much like an excuse for more
bureaucratic aggrandizement and therapeutic Do-Good
to be taken very seriously as real science or public
health.
©Copyright 1994 CAPITOL INSIDERS, Inc. - PHOTOCOPYING ILLEGAL
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204693679-7

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March 21, 1994 ` ' Page 5
one had anticipated there would be criticism
focused on alleged shameless media-
mongering by Kessler. But the criticism came
in torrents, and the coup that generated
exfiilaration among the Kessler media
managers on Friday quickly sunk to the depths
of depression the following week.
The strategy went sour when it was clear that
Kessler was seeking to use the media to thwart
criticism of FDA and his leadership. And the
political risk to Kessler was considerable
except for the shennanigans of Bill and Hillary
in Little Rock some eight to ten years ago, and
continuing to the present day, which has
Volume 4, No. 5
diverted any attention from the missteps of
any Administration official not directly
involved in the Whitewater scandal..
It would be difficult to argue that any political
animal in Washington could now be any
happier than Senator D'Amato or
Congressman Gingrich, but the plain fact is
David Kessler dodged an arguably fatal blow
while no one was looking. When the riptides
of Whitewater subside, however, the political
opportunism of David Kessler may well be a
fully developed political hurricane as the
Congress attempts to deflect the shark attacks
of the tobacco industry.
Hillary Clinton Drug Stock
Investments Under Scrutiny
.
Bill and Hillary Clinton knew they had a
winning political issue on their hands when
they started bashing the pharmaceutical
industry during the 1992 Presidential
Campaign. It was an issue that hit such a
responsive chord with the electorate that the
Clintons kept up the rhetorical attack as they
developed their health care reform package.
No one likes to pay for prescription drugs
when they are sick, and the high costs place
low-income and fixed-income consumers in a
particularly difficult economic position when
they need to pay for drugs needed to treat
illness and physical problems. The high costs
of research and development for new drug
products, combined with a voracious appetite
by investors for solid returns on high-risk drug
research projects, created a fertile field for the
Clintons to be political demagogues. And they
were quick to jump on the backs of drug
manufacturers for every possible political
advantage.
But it now appears Hillary Clinton may have
violated federal conflict-of-interest laws by
benefiting from stock transactions while acting
as the head of the White House Health Care
Reform Task Force. Eighty Republican
Congressmen joined in a complaint against
Hillary Clinton to the Office of Government
Ethics alleging Mrs. Clinton was a member of
a partnership that garnered at least $275,000 in
profits on drug company stock prices that
fluctuated after her highly critical speeches.
At the time Mrs. Clinton was making these
critical speeches, she held an interest in a non-
public limited partnership that made
investments that would benefit in drops in
pharmaceutical and health-care stocks. A
college case study demonstrated that Hillary
Clinton's speeches caused drug firms stocks to
drop as much as 27 percent. It will be a long
summer for Hillary when she gets by the
Whitewater mess.
©Copyright 1994 CAPITOL Iti'SIDERS, Inc. - PHOTOCOPYING ILLEGAL
26 46 33098
