(WTAF. Sounds like someone wants to start taking credit for things during his 
final days of squatting in public housing. --rick)


White House orders FDA chief to authorize Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine Friday or 
submit his resignation

Josh Dawsey, Laurie McGinley

https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/12/11/trump-stephen-hahn-fda-covid-vaccine/

White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on Friday told Stephen Hahn, the 
commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, to submit his resignation if 
the agency does not clear the nation’s first coronavirus vaccine by day’s end, 
according to people familiar with the situation who spoke on the condition of 
anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss what happened.

The threat came on the same day that President Trump tweeted that the FDA is “a 
big, old, slow turtle” in its handling of vaccines, while exhorting 
Commissioner Stephen Hahn to “get the dam vaccines out NOW.” He added: “Stop 
playing games and start saving lives!!!”

It also led the FDA to accelerate its timetable for clearing America’s first 
vaccine from Saturday morning to later Friday, according to two people familiar 
with the process who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal 
matters.

The White House actions once again inject politics into the vaccine race, 
potentially undermining public trust in one of the most crucial tools to end 
the pandemic that has killed more than 290,000 Americans. It comes in the midst 
of a process that had been designed to show no shortcuts were taken in 
reviewing the safety and effectiveness of a vaccine as surveys show many people 
remain unsure whether they will get the shots.

A White House official declined to comment, saying “we don’t comment on private 
conversations, but the Chief regularly requests updates on progress toward a 
vaccine.”

“This is an untrue representation of the phone call with the Chief of Staff,” 
Hahn said in a statement. “The FDA was encouraged to continue working 
expeditiously on Pfizer-BioNTech’s EUA request. FDA is committed to issuing 
this authorization quickly, as we noted in our statement this morning.”

The two-shot vaccine, which has been shown to be 95 percent effective in 
randomized trials involving tens of thousands of people, has already been 
cleared by Britain, Canada, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. U.S. officials have 
engaged in a more rigorous review process that they believe will boost public 
confidence.

Meadows’ threat and the president’s tweets constituted the latest attack by 
Trump, who has complained vociferously that the vaccine wasn’t authorized 
before Election Day, blaming it on the ‘Deep State’ inside the agency that he 
accused of working against his reelection. Trump was also said to be upset that 
Britain cleared the vaccine before the United States, although the 
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has been developed and reviewed in record time.

With the timetable apparently accelerated from Saturday morning, the FDA and 
Pfizer were rushing to complete the paperwork needed for the authorization, 
according to another individual who spoke on the condition of anonymity because 
he didn’t have authority to discuss the plans.

Pushing up authorization is not expected to change the timing of delivery of 
doses to vaccination sites or their readiness to give people shots, according 
to a person familiar with the distribution plans, not authorized to speak.

An FDA statement issued early Friday morning said the FDA had informed Pfizer 
that it would “rapidly work toward finalization and issuance of an emergency 
use authorization” following Thursday’s endorsement of the Pfizer-BioNTech 
vaccine by an agency advisory committee.

The statement was signed by Hahn and Peter Marks, director of the Center for 
Biologics Evaluation and Research, which reviews vaccines. The officials said 
the FDA has also notified the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and 
Operation Warp Speed, “so they can execute their plans for timely vaccine 
distribution.”

An FDA advisory committee reviewed the vaccine for more than eight hours 
Thursday and voted overwhelmingly in favor of using it in people age 16 and up. 
It is unclear whether a decision on the vaccine on a Friday night would do 
anything to speed up the delivery of the first vaccine doses.

-- Carolyn Y. Johnson contributed to this report.
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