Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Hillary Clinton Announced Another Canada Policy This Week, Could Affect Millions: Pharma

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2015 03:05 PM
    WASHINGTON — Lost in the noise of her headline-grabbing coming-out against the Keystone XL pipeline, Hillary Clinton announced another Canada-U.S. policy this week that could affect millions of people.
     
    She called for legalizing prescription-pill imports from Canada, becoming the second Democratic presidential candidate to adopt the position and effectively making it party policy in the 2016 election.
     
    Millions of Americans who struggle with high drug prices have purchased cheaper medicine abroad since online pharmacies first opened two decades ago, with Canada pioneering that grey-market industry.
     
    The issue has resurfaced politically as U.S. drug prices experience their biggest jump in years. One company was forced to back down last week amid news that a life-saving medicine had increased overnight from $13.50 to $750 per pill.
     
    The same pill is available from a Canadian online pharmacy for $5.28. It's generally illegal for Americans to buy and import that medicine, but the law is rarely enforced.
     
    Now Clinton wants to normalize the practice.
     
    "If the medicine you need costs less in Canada, you should be able to buy it from Canada — or any other country that meets our safety standards," she told an Iowa audience the same day she announced her long-awaited pipeline position.
     
    "When I was privileged to represent upstate New York (as a senator)... every week there would be buses of American seniors going over to Canada, to buy drugs that were American-manufactured, drugs that were invented by American companies, for a much cheaper price over the border.
     
    "That makes no sense at all, folks ... I don't want you to have to drive to Canada. So you can order them online."
     
    She became the latest candidate to endorse that policy. As he presented a bill this month, socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders reminded people that he helped spread word of cheaper drugs in Canada, in 1999 when he took a busload of seniors on a cross-border trip to the pharmacy.
     
    "I will never forget the tears in the eyes of women who were able to buy the breast cancer drug tamoxifen at one-10th of the price that they were paying in the U.S.," Sanders said.
     
    "If we can import lettuce and tomatoes from Mexico, there is absolutely no reason why we cannot import safe and affordable prescription drugs from Canada."
     
    The issue cuts across partisan lines. There's a similar Senate bill from Republican John McCain. Republican Mike Huckabee is campaigning on the idea. A survey from the Kaiser foundation said 72 per cent of Americans support buying prescription drugs from Canada. The proportion was higher among Republicans.
     
    Congress even passed a law allowing importation in 2000 — but the president, Clinton's husband, gutted it. George W. Bush and Barack Obama both campaigned on a policy change — it never happened.
     
    The pharmaceutical industry has considerable pull in Washington.
     
    It spent US$229 million lobbying Congress last year, according to the transparency site Open Secrets, and it donated $50 million in the 2012 election. For the sake of comparison, that last sum is almost as much as all the national spending allowed for political parties in Canada's current election.
     
    As their shares dipped slightly this week, the industry blasted Clinton's speech and argued her policies would hurt companies that create new drugs.
     
    She laid out other proposals including ending certain tax breaks, creating spending targets for research, and a $250-a-month limit on out-of-pocket expenses under insurance plans.
     
    She accused the industry of anti-competitive behaviour and price-gouging, citing the controversial 5,000-per-cent price increase in the drug Daraprim.
     
    Her plan proposes a crackdown on one factor believed to be driving high prices: collusion. 
     
    Like Sanders, she wants to curb the practice dubbed "pay to delay" — where drug makers pay off generic rivals to keep them from bringing cheaper alternatives to market. U.S. federal regulators have punished companies over that practice on different occasions this year alone, and Sanders proposes far more severe penalties, including stripping companies of exclusivity rights over a drug.
     
    But how would that affect Canadians?
     
    One health-policy researcher worries it could hurt them by causing supply shortages and driving up prices.
     
    "The giant sucking sound that would empty our pharmacies into the U.S. would be heard across the country," said Amir Attaran, a health-policy researcher at the University of Ottawa. 
     
    "The drug shortages ... in Canada ... would be massive."
     
    A prominent health economist is less worried. A supply crisis would be far likelier in a major outbreak or a terrorist attack, said Steve Morgan of the University of British Columbia.
     
    But he agreed online pharmacies wouldn't solve the price problem for Americans.
     
    He proposes a single-payer pharmaceutical system for Canada — and for the U.S., he says, greater government management would improve the system.
     
    Right now, U.S. prices are mostly fictitious, he says. Patients with insurance providers get discounts negotiated in secret. Others use online coupons.
     
    The net result is a system designed to make everyone pay the maximum they can afford. And those without access to insurance or discounts could be out of luck.
     
    With a better-managed system, he said, "you would just eliminate all these games."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crews try to prevent spilled coal ash from fouling Banff National Park creek

    Crews try to prevent spilled coal ash from fouling Banff National Park creek
    BANFF, Alta. — Crews are trying prevent coal ash waste that was spilled by Canadian Pacific Railway cars from fouling the waters of a creek in Banff National Park.

    Crews try to prevent spilled coal ash from fouling Banff National Park creek

    Judge orders Metis Nation-Saskatchewan meeting after group loses funding

    Judge orders Metis Nation-Saskatchewan meeting after group loses funding
    SASKATOON — A judge says council members with Metis Nation-Saskatchewan need to put aside their "toxic" infighting and hold a meeting.

    Judge orders Metis Nation-Saskatchewan meeting after group loses funding

    Surrey RCMP Look For Leads In Shooting That Left Man In Serious Condition

    Surrey RCMP Look For Leads In Shooting That Left Man In Serious Condition
    SURREY, B.C. — Mounties in Surrey, B.C., are investigating a shooting involving a man who was found lying in a driveway with gunshot wounds to his chest and abdomen.

    Surrey RCMP Look For Leads In Shooting That Left Man In Serious Condition

    Transit Police Shooting In Surrey Under Investigation, Watchdog Interviews Witnesses

    Transit Police Shooting In Surrey Under Investigation, Watchdog Interviews Witnesses
    SURREY, B.C. — Investigators with B.C.'s police watchdog have conducted about 20 interviews with witnesses who were inside a Surrey, B.C., grocery store when transit police officers shot a man.

    Transit Police Shooting In Surrey Under Investigation, Watchdog Interviews Witnesses

    Six Charged In Double Homicide In Anahim Lake, B.C.

    Six Charged In Double Homicide In Anahim Lake, B.C.
    The RCMP say 23-year-old Matthew Hennigar and 22-year-old Kalvin Andy were found dead late Friday night in the small community of Anahim Lake, located roughly 400 kilometres northwest of Vancouver.

    Six Charged In Double Homicide In Anahim Lake, B.C.

    16-year-old Boy Dies In Snowmobile Accident In B.C. Interior

    16-year-old Boy Dies In Snowmobile Accident In B.C. Interior
    The boy, who was from Salmon Arm, became separated from a group of snowmobilers in the Hunters Range area near Enderby on Sunday.

    16-year-old Boy Dies In Snowmobile Accident In B.C. Interior