John Dalli’s pro-industry line may face opposition in EP
Minister John Dalli may not win the endorsement he needs from the European Parliament if he is perceived by too many anti-industry forces as a pro-industry Trojan horse at the very heart of EU health policy, according to Reflector, Pharm Exec Europe’s Brussels correspondent.
Dalli, who is due to take office in the new year as the new European Commissioner for Health and Consumer Policy, has indicated a strong pro-industry line in his first official utterances. He will face MEPs in January before a crucial vote on the new Commission.
In a guest blog on PharmExec.com, a website on global business and marketing focusing on the pharmaceutical industry, the writer states that this should make the Parliament’s routine hearings of commissioners-designate more interesting than normal.
In the article, the writer says that the November announcement of a switch in European Union responsibilities for pharmaceuticals sowed alarm and despondency within the pharmaceutical industry in Europe. The fear was that key priorities would be neglected with the removal of drugs policy from the industry commissioner’s portfolio.
Giving it to the new health commissioner would, it was assumed, dilute the industry’s influence in an ocean of well-meaning but misguided social babble led by health-insurance and health-activist lobbies.
John Dalli, the little-known nominee for the new post, may be about to prove the industry fears unfounded, Reflector writes. In a letter to the European Parliament, Dalli makes clear that one of his priorities will be “to make affordable, safe and efficacious medicines available to patients across the EU.” Integrating pharmaceuticals into public health “requires careful management,” he says, and “we must strive to reinvigorate this sector through innovation and enhancing its economic competitiveness.”
He accepts “the paramount principle of patient safety,” but there is, he says, no contradiction in pursuing both goals. He makes clear that he wants to speed up drug approvals and cut the cost of the process. He will take advantage of an upcoming review of the European Medicines Agency to assess “whether there is scope for measures whereby we can optimize the bringing of new medicines to the market as quickly as possible and with the minimum of expense.”
According to the Reflector, Dalli speaks of his commitment to defending consumer interests against counterfeit pharmaceutical sales on the internet, and is ready to push for tighter enforcement, because counterfeiting is not only “an affront to consumers, but also because this attacks Europe’s economic wellbeing, especially as it undermines innovation.”
And he offers no concessions to public prejudices about new science. On cloning, nanotechnology and genetically modified organisms, he says policy will be based on scientific facts, and will aim to “enhance Europe’s innovative drive” while taking due account of ethics and risks.
But Dalli is not yet a shoo-in, Reflector insisted on the blog post. As a member of the centre-right European People’s Party, he can expect support from the centre-right majority in the parliament. But there was wide parliamentary backing for putting pharmaceuticals into the health commissioner’s portfolio, and the intention was not to make life easier for drug firms. Nor do the patient groups and health activists that have long lobbied for this change expect to see the switch subverted by the new man in charge, the writer adds.
Related Articles:
- John Dalli to face public hearing at the European Parliament
by MaltaMedia News -13 January 2010 - John Dalli outlines priorities as EU Commissioner
by MaltaMedia News -18 December 2009 - Video: John Dalli pleased with hearing
by MaltaMedia News -14 January 2010 - “I got to know about John Dalli from TV” – Joe Borg
by MaltaMedia News -29 November 2009 - John Dalli given Health and Consumer Policy portfolio
by MaltaMedia News -27 November 2009

