The U.S. House Energy & Commerce Committee's Health Subcommittee today will host the third hearing…
CFIF on X CFIF on YouTube
340B Drug Pricing Program Contributes to Rising Healthcare Costs and Is Ripe for Reform

The U.S. House Energy & Commerce Committee's Health Subcommittee today will host the third hearing in its health care affordability series, specifically examining the role providers and hospitals play in shaping the cost of care for Americans.

While the hearing will likely examine numerous issues, there is none more ripe for reform than the flawed 340B drug pricing program.

Originally enacted to help eligible safety-net providers buy medicines at steep discounts and pass the savings on to lower-income and vulnerable patients, the program has ballooned as a revenue stream for many participating hospitals and contract pharmacy chains.

As the size and complexity of the 340B program has expanded, participating hospitals and contract pharmacies have instead used the program to increase…[more]

March 18, 2026 • 08:46 AM
Siga Smallpox Contract Is the Next Solyndra Scandal
By Ashton Ellis
Tuesday, November 15 2011
If the Solyndra scandal failed to convince some people that President Barack Obama’s promise to “restore science to its rightful place” above political considerations has no basis in reality, a new taxpayer-funded boondoggle involving yet another corrupt government contract proves it.  Details are rapidly emerging that Siga Technologies Inc., a little-known pharmaceutical company with deep ties to the Obama White House, is using its political connections to secure a $433 million contract that violates federal procurement procedure and scientific integrity.  On November…
 
This Week’s Sloppy, Shameful ObamaCare Ruling Provides Wake-Up Call to American Voters
“The right to be free from federal regulation is not absolute, and yields to the imperative that…
Read more...
Lessons from 1815
Sometimes writers can get too fond of metaphors. A visit to the site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans…
Read more...
 
White House Chief of Staff Latest Scapegoat for Failed Policies
To hear the political media tell it, Bill Daley’s failure as White House Chief of Staff was due…
Read more...
The Myth of Romney’s Electability
If Mitt Romney becomes the Republican presidential nominee in 2012, the former Massachusetts governor…
Read more...
 
Tea Partiers, Conservatives Should Embrace Congressional Anti-Piracy Legislation
Here’s a reliable rule of thumb:  If Senator Marco Rubio (R – Florida) and Representative…
Read more...
Study: List of ‘Occupy’ Supporters Includes Racists, Terrorists, Communists… and Obama
In an interview with ABC News last month, President Barack Obama sympathized with the Occupy Wall Street…
Read more...
 
Free to Lie, but not to Opine?
Imagine a country where outside groups could be punished for offering their opinion about the effects…
Read more...
Contempt for the Governed: Obama’s End-Run Around the Democratic Process
President Obama is a man for whom the founding legacy of the United States seems little more than a perpetual…
Read more...
 
Congressman to Bureaucrats: “Stop Sitting on Our Assets”
When it comes to underutilized federal properties, Rep. Jeff Denham (R-CA) offers a simple solution:…
Read more...
Poll: Support for Gun Control Falls to Record Low
Not all current societal trends are negative, although it’s often easy to overlook that fact. …
Read more...
Notable Quote   
 
"The prognosis of the Iran War is now so couched in politics and so warped by the American Left that the public has grown tired and wants it all to go away. But in truth, the situation is so fluid that any accurate prediction is impossible. Yet there is good reason to believe in an eventual outcome quite favorable to the U.S. and one far better than the status quo ante bellum. ...Prior to President…[more]
 
 
— Victor Davis Hanson, Distinguished Fellow at Center for American Greatness and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution
 
Liberty Poll   

If Iran is allowed to retain its existing stockpile of nuclear material and, even temporarily, maintain control of the Strait of Hormuz, will the war have been worth it?