Current:Home > ScamsHouse GOP chair accuses HHS of "changing their story" on NIH reappointments snafu -PureWealth Academy
House GOP chair accuses HHS of "changing their story" on NIH reappointments snafu
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:46:56
A top-ranking House Republican on Tuesday accused the Department of Health and Human Services of "changing their story," after the Biden administration defended the legality of its reappointments for key National Institutes of Health officials that Republicans have questioned.
The claim from Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, chair of the GOP-led House Energy and Commerce Committee, follows a Friday letter from the panel to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.
The panel alleged that 14 top-ranking NIH officials were not lawfully reappointed at the end of 2021, potentially jeopardizing billions in grants they approved.
It also raised concerns about affidavits Becerra signed earlier this year to retroactively ratify the appointments, in an effort the department said was only meant to bolster defenses against bad-faith legal attacks.
"Health and Human Services seems to keep changing their story. This is just their latest effort. I don't know if they don't know what the law is, or they are intentionally misleading," McMorris Rodgers told CBS News senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge on "America Decides" Tuesday.
In a statement to CBS News, an HHS spokesperson had criticized the panel's allegations as "clearly politically motivated" and said it stood "by the legitimacy of these NIH [Institutes and Centers] Directors' reappointments."
"As their own report shows, the prior administration appointed at least five NIH IC officials under the process they now attack," the spokesperson had said.
Asked about the Biden administration's response, McMorris Rodgers said that the previous reappointments were not relevant to the law the committee claims the Biden administration has broken.
And she said that she thinks that the administration is responding to a provision that only governs pay scale, not propriety of the appointments themselves.
"But what we are talking about is a separate provision in the law. It was included, it was added, in the 21st Century Cures to provide accountability to taxpayers and by Congress, it was intentional. And it is to ensure that these individuals actually are appointed or reappointed by the secretary every five years," McMorris Rodgers added.
Democrats on the panel have criticized their Republican counterparts' claims as "based on flawed legal analysis," saying that the law is "absolutely clear" that "the authority to appoint or reappoint these positions sits with the Director of the National Institutes of Health, who acts on behalf of the Secretary of Health and Human Services."
"The shift in appointment power from the Secretary of HHS to the NIH Director in 21st Century Cures was actually a provision Committee Republicans insisted on including in the law during legislative negotiations in 2016," Rep. Frank Pallone, the committee's ranking member, said in a statement Tuesday.
Alexander TinCBS News reporter covering public health and the pandemic.
veryGood! (56412)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- New Orleans priest publicly admits to sexually abusing minors
- American Airlines is suing Skiplagged, which helps customers book cheaper flights using a loophole
- Natalie Hudson named first Black chief justice of Minnesota Supreme Court
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- 'She's special': Aces' A'ja Wilson ties WNBA single-game scoring record with 53-point effort
- 3 inches of rain leads to flooding, evacuations for a small community near the Grand Canyon
- Traveler stopped at Dulles airport with 77 dry seahorses, 5 dead snakes
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Feds fine ship company $2 million for dumping oil and garbage into ocean off U.S. coast
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Body cam video shows police finding woman chained to bedroom floor in Louisville, Kentucky
- Workers in Disney World district criticize DeSantis appointees’ decision to eliminate free passes
- Driver of minivan facing charge in Ohio school bus crash that killed 1 student, hurt 23
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Amputees can get their body parts back for spiritual reasons, new Oregon law says
- North Korea conducts rocket launch in likely 2nd attempt to put spy satellite into orbit
- Illinois Environmental Groups Applaud Vetoes by Pritzker
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
St. Louis proposal would ban ‘military-grade’ weapons, prohibit guns for ‘insurrectionists’
The Fukushima nuclear plant’s wastewater will be discharged to the sea. Here’s what you need to know
'Floodwater up to 3 feet high' Grand Canyon flooding forces evacuations, knocks out power
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Supporters of silenced Montana lawmaker Zooey Zephyr won’t face trespassing charges
New York golfer charged with animal cruelty after goose killed with golf club
NBA’s Jimmy Butler and singer Sebastián Yatra play tennis at a US Open charity event for Ukraine