Dr. Anthony Fauci and Sen. Rand Paul at July 2021 hearing |
Sen. Rand Paul, one of Fauci's leading critics in Congress, hopes to chair the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, and First District Rep. James Comer is likely to chair the House Oversight and Reform Committee, on which he is the ranking Republican. The GOP is more likely to gain control of the House, so "Comer’s path to a congressional gavel looks more likely," Catanese writes.
Rep. James Comer |
Paul solicited $22 campaign contributions to join his "Fauci retirement club" and formally asked the National Institutes of Health, where Fauci works, to retain Fauci’s documents for review, Catanese reports. Fauci responded on Fox News that he welcomed “legitimate, dignified oversight.”
Bianca Keaton, campaign manager Charles Booker, for Paul’s Democratic opponent in the Nov. 8 election, "said Booker believes in oversight but panned Paul’s motives," Catanese reports. Keaton said Paul is trying to "rile up his shrinking base, sow confusion and boost his fundraising another failed presidential run.
Paul has said he believes the novel coronavirus was accidentally leaked from a Chinese laboratory, and treats it as a fact, tweeting that "He will be asked to testify under oath regarding any discussions he participated in concerning the lab leak." Catanese points out, "While the main scientific consensus is that the virus originated from a wet seafood market – moving from infected animals to humans – some scientists continue to probe the theory of a lab leak. Fauci said this week he’s always maintained he’s kept 'an open mind … as to the origin'."
Paul and Fauci have crossed swords several times. In "Correcting Misinformation about Dr. Fauci," D'Angelo Gore of FactCheck.org writes:Paul accused Fauci of lying when Fauci said in a May 2021 Senate hearing that "The NIH has not ever and does not now fund gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology." But there’s no evidence that Fauci lied to Congress, as Paul asserted in a July 20, 2021, hearing, about funding gain-of-function research — which the U.S. government generally defined in 2014 as aiming to "increase the ability of infectious agents to cause disease by enhancing its pathogenicity or by increasing its transmissibility." Fauci has said that the research that was funded "was judged by qualified staff up and down the chain as not being gain-of-function," and the NIH has said the same. The issue is that scientists have differing opinions on what counts as gain-of-function research. Paul has posited that Fauci, among others, "could be culpable for the entire pandemic" if the SARS-CoV-2 virus leaked from a Wuhan lab that was conducting gain-of-function research. But there is no proof of a lab leak, and there is evidence that the bat coronaviruses studied under the NIH grant could not have caused the pandemic.
No comments:
Post a Comment