Opioid crisis is major midterm issue in areas hard hit by drug deaths
From
the bustling streets of Philadelphia to the rural farmlands of Mercer
County, nearly every community in Pennsylvania has been rocked by the
opioid crisis – and the problem keeps worsening.
In 2016, more than 4,600 Pennsylvanians died as a result of drug abuse. It has affected the lives of thousands more.
Jose
Benitez, the executive director of a needle exchange clinic in
Philadelphia, struggles to make sure he has enough manpower and
resources to treat his growing number of patients. He said three years
ago, he treated 4,000 patients. Now, he serves about 15,000, most of
whom are battling opioid-related addictions.
“We have mothers, fathers, sister, brothers dying daily,” he said. “It has to stop.”
For
Benitez, additional funding and attention to the opioid crisis is a
tipping point in the Pennsylvania midterm election. He hopes to see
lawmakers who are educated on addiction and can provide innovative
solutions.
Additional funding and attention to the opioid crisis is seen as a
tipping point for some voters in the Pennsylvania midterm election.
They have said they hope to see lawmakers who are educated on addiction
and can provide innovative solutions.
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“What
we’ve done so far isn’t working,” Benitez said. “In Kensington
[Philadelphia], we have more than 600 homeless people, most of them
addicted to opioids. It’s a real public health issue and it’s
devastating our communities.”
The opioid problem is emerging as a
major issue during the midterm elections, particularly in areas hard hit
by the growing crisis.
“This is an issue that voters on the
ground care about,” said Jeanne Zaino, a political science professor at
Iona College in New Rochelle, N.Y. “Look at the Wisconsin Senate race,
for example, where healthcare has been a major issue leading up to the
midterm.” A recent analysis by the Wall Street Journal
shows that ads mentioning the opioid crisis have aired more than 50,000
times in congressional and gubernatorial races across 25 states. Just
four years ago, at around this time, it had only been mentioned 70
times, the Journal reported.
The Wisconsin Senate race is one of
several where candidates have feuded over how to address the opioid
epidemic. Democrats in the state have hammered away at Republican
candidate Leah Vukmir's legislative health care record, claiming she
sides with insurance companies and businesses over ordinary
Wisconsinites. Republicans say a government-run system will not only
divert treatment but decrease the quality of care for everyone.
It
is also a major problem in Pennsylvania’s largest county, Philadelphia,
where more than 1,217 drug-related deaths were reported last year.
The
Democratic candidate for Congress in Lehigh Valley, Susan Wild, wants
to focus on medical care – not criminal prosecutions. Her Republican
opponent, Marty Nothstein, thinks the focus should be on public safety.
Nothstein believes beefed up border security will help cut off the
influx of what he calls replacement drugs – like fentanyl and heroin –
that have contributed to fatalities both regionally and nationally.
In
northeast Pennsylvania, the opioid crisis has become a political focal
point. Incumbent Rep. Tom Marino, R-Cogan Station, was nearly named
America's drug czar, under the Trump administration, but withdrew his
name after he was accused of weakening laws that favored the
pharmaceutical industry.
Marino, a former federal prosecutor, has
called the allegations a “hatchet job.” Nonetheless, has been
criticized by his Democratic opponent, Marc Friedenberg, who claims
Marino is too cozy with drug companies to make a real dent on the opioid
crisis.
“Throughout my campaign, this crisis has been one of the most common issues that voters want to talk about,” Friedenberg said in a recent statement.
“We need real solutions; we don’t need politicians like Tom Marino who
are more interested in cashing checks from Big Pharma than they are in
helping Pennsylvanians.”
Friedenberg held an “opioid town hall”
last month. This past summer, Marino also held a town hall focusing on
the opioid crisis that was co-hosted by celebrity Dr. Phil.
Marino
has defended his record, saying as a prosecutor he has dedicated his
life to “aggressive and faithful enforcement” of the nation’s laws.
“Given
my lifelong devotion to law enforcement, I insist on correcting the
record regarding the false accusations and unfair reporting to which I
have been subjected," Marino said when the allegations first arose.
The opioid problem is emerging as a major issue during the midterm
elections, particularly in areas hard hit by the growing crisis.
Zaino believes the current drug crisis can become the
deciding factor in many toss-up races in the northeast. Combating the
opioid epidemic is a shared viewpoint, Zaino said, essentially no one
opposes it – but candidates do differ on how to address the issue.
“When
you remove healthcare coverage from the conversation, the likelihood of
someone accessing treatment significantly decreases,” said Democratic
Strategist Roger Fisk. “So, Republicans are really at odds with
themselves on this issue. You can’t fight the epidemic and cancel
coverage at the time.”
Republicans, on the other hand, would like
to see a shared effort between the private and public sector as well as
emphasizing law enforcement’s role in cutting off the flow of illicit
drugs.
“This issue is about making America strong again, the
community along with lawmakers have to forge an alliance and work
together to repair our communities,” said Republican strategist Chris
Prudhome.
Despite the differences, the topic has remained a
priority for lawmakers. Last week, Congress approved a rare bipartisan
bill to combat the growing health crisis – creating, expanding and
reauthorizing drug programs and policies across almost every federal
agency.
The bill was sent to the White House just in time for lawmakers to campaign on the issue before the November midterm elections.
“It
will be interesting to see how voters in the Northeast, where there are
Republicans and Democrats running on this issue with two different
viewpoints, vote,” said Zaino, “I think only the exit polls will tell us
what Americans want to see happen next.”
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