Price resigns as HHS Secretary amid scandal

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Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price resigned Friday, amid controversy over his use of private jets for official and personal business. He promised a day earlier to pay back some of the $400,000 spent on those flights, but the offer came too late for the Trump White House.

In a statement released Friday afternoon, the White House said President Donald Trump he intends to designate Don Wright of Virginia to serve as acting secretary, effective at midnight Friday. Wright serves as the deputy assistant secretary for health at HHS and he directs the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.

Price, an orthopedic surgeon and former House Budget Committee chairman, was surrounded by controversy since his nomination to the nation's top health post in January. He made questionable stock trades in health care companies while a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee and interceded on behalf of donors with federal agencies. Democrats in the Senate fought his confirmation, charging that he was too ethically challenged to serve as HHS secretary.

Since June, Price was increasingly viewed by President Donald Trump as ineffective in helping to push a GOP plan to "repeal and replace" the Affordable Care Act through Congress.

Price had been under pressure since Sept. 19, when Politico broke the news that he had taken numerous official trips via private jet, costing tens of thousands of dollars more than commercial flights.

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One of those trips involved a charter flight to Philadelphia, which can be reached by car from Washington in just over two hours. Subsequent reporting by Politico revealed that Price's more than two dozen private plane trips cost in excess of $400,000, and that some of the trips included personal as well as official business.

He also traveled with his wife to such international destinations as Africa, Europe and Asia on military flights at a cost to taxpayers of more than $500,000 — bringing the total expense to taxpayers since May to more than a million dollars, according to Politico.

Price said last weekend he would stop using private planes pending an investigation by the HHS Inspector General, but he and his staff have repeatedly defended the trips as necessary to get him to events in a timely manner.

Pressed by reporters Wednesday about the spreading scandal, Trump said he was "not happy" about the private plane travel "and I let him know it." Asked if he would fire Price, Trump responded, "We'll see."

On Thursday, Price released a statement saying he would "take no more private charter flights as Secretary of HHS. No exceptions." Price also said he would "write a personal check to the US Treasury for the expenses of my travel on private charter planes." He added that taxpayers would not "pay a dime for my seat on those planes."

His offer for the domestic flights — about $52,000 — was a fraction of what taxpayers paid for his entourage.

 


http://www.kaiserhealthnews.orgThis article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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