• duxup 3 hours ago

    >In early August, soon after joining the FDA, Tidmarsh announced actions that would effectively remove from the market a drug ingredient made by a company associated with Tang. Tidmarsh’s lawyer then sent a letter to Tang proposing that he extend a “service agreement” for “another 10 years,” which would see Tang making payments to a Tidmarsh-associated entity until 2044. The email was seen as attempted extortion, with such payments being in exchange for Tidmarsh rolling back the FDA’s regulatory change.

    Straight up extortion.

    • vibrio 31 minutes ago

      “He had the temerity to reject a drug that had lousy data…”

      Was that data really “lousy”? (Referencing the REPL data?) Was it a trial design issue? (which he has very strong and unconventional opinions on) Is it the role of his position to overrule his specialist review teams ? (in the absence of any clear safety risks or malfeasance)

      • terminalshort 7 minutes ago

        We need to get rid of this system where these bureaucrats have the power to decide what medicine people have access to. Just make the data public and let people decide for themselves.

      • ubiquitysc 29 minutes ago

        At least clowns can be fun to watch

        • timr 3 hours ago

          Setting aside the entirely unprofessional and unnecessary insult language [1], this is trashy, partisan "journalism". An article about a singular scandal at the FDA buries the lede amongst complaints about the CDC, and a non-sequitur about Vinay Prasad that doesn't even mention anything specific.

          Mods should switch the link to the much better article at Stat News [2], which this is just badly regurgitating anyway.

          > Many of the scandals are tied to Vinay Prasad, the Trump administration’s top vaccine regulator, who also has the titles of chief medical officer and chief scientific officer. Prasad made a name for himself on social media during the pandemic as a COVID-19 response skeptic and, since joining the FDA, has been known for overruling agency scientists and sowing distrust, unrest, and paranoia among staff. He was pushed out of the agency in July only to be reinstated about two weeks later.

          An honest journalist would note that Prasad was pushed out from the right (possibly from industry activism) because he had the temerity to reject a drug that had lousy evidence (the "scandals" in question, which were not actually scandals). The Wall Street Journal, Laura Loomer and a US Senator have made a coordinated vendetta against the guy, who is quite possibly one of the most principled actors in this administration.

          [1] The "clown show" epithet came from an unnamed "venture captial investor". Come now. If you're going to fling that kind of petty invective, cite your sources, particularly when those sources come from investors in the regulated industry.

          [2] https://www.statnews.com/2025/11/04/fda-in-disarray-expert-a...

          • 0cf8612b2e1e 44 minutes ago

            Singular scandal? It is about the top dog using his position to settle a personal vendetta for financial gain.

            • timr 34 minutes ago

              Yes, that's one scandal, from one person. It has nothing to do with Vinay Prasad, certainly nothing to do with the CDC, and whatever you think of the administration, connecting this event to "everything else" is political hackery.

            • add-sub-mul-div 3 hours ago

              Laura Loomer affecting staffing decisions because one of their stooges isn't the right flavor of corrupt and incompetent for her is what a clown show is. Pretending this deserves the same dignity as a competent and good faith administration would be the ultimate participation trophy.

              Having a stance is not the same thing as bias and it's not the same thing as partisanship.