COLUMBIA--Republican U.S. Senate candidate Jim
DeMint wants to combat the nation's soaring prescription drug costs with
competition from other countries.
The three-term congressman said Wednesday he wants to open U.S. markets
to prescription drug sales from Canada, the European Union and other
nations. A bill he sponsored passed the House last year, but stalled in
the Senate.
"Americans are now getting a raw deal," DeMint said. "Our own drug
companies are selling drugs made in this country to Canada and European
counties for half and even a third of what they sell it to us."
DeMint said local pharmacies should have the right to purchase
prescription drugs at the lowest cost, whether it's from companies in
America or another country.
"This is one way that we can reduce the cost of prescriptions for
Americans, and we need to pursue this aggressively," DeMint said.
Americans have flocked to Canada for prescription medications as drug
prices in the United States have increased and fixed incomes have not kept
up, advocates say.
Several states and cities also have turned to Canada to buy
prescription drugs for workers or made it easier for residents to hook up
with Canadian Internet pharmacies.
The sale of foreign drugs are prohibited in South Carolina, said Jim
Knight, spokesman for the state Labor, License and Regulation Department.
Jim Bracewell, executive vice president of the South Carolina Pharmacy
Association, said his group supports access to foreign prescription drugs
but wants reassurance the medicines are what the doctor ordered.
Regulation of imported prescription drugs has been the biggest
stumbling block in the federal government, Bracewell said.
The Food and Drug Administration opposes importation from Canada
because it cannot guarantee the medicine's safety, officials have said.
DeMint disagrees, saying the drugs from other countries are often made
in America.
He said prescription drugs are the only product Americans are not
allowed to purchase from anywhere else.
"The law that we support would support orders of prescriptions from
certified vendors in other countries," DeMint said.
DeMint and officials in other states have been pushing the Bush
administration to change its policy prohibiting Canadian drug imports in a
bid to save money on drug costs.
The congressman said cheaper drugs are necessary now that the
government has agreed to help pay for prescriptions in the Medicare reform
bill, a measure DeMint voted against, saying it would bankrupt the system.
DeMint's Democratic opponent, Inez Tenenbaum, agreed with the
Republican on this issue.
"We definitely support reimportation of prescription drugs as a way to
bring down the cost for South Carolina seniors," said Tenenbaum's
spokeswoman Kay Packett.