House set to approve expansion of drug board's authority to lower costs
House Democrats beat back a series of Republican amendments on party-line votes Wednesday, setting up a final vote on a proposal to expand the authority of a state board created to lower prescription drug prices in Maryland.
Del. Bonnie Cullison (D-Montgomery) defended House Bill 424, which would expand the authority of the Prescription Drug Affordability Board from drugs purchased by state health plans to drugs purchased by any drug provider in the state. She rejected GOP arguments that the board would set a limit on prices.
'We're not controlling anyone's prices. We are controlling our own budgets,' Cullison said of the upper payment limits the board could set. 'We cannot price it. What we can say is, 'This is how much we're going to pay. This is how much we can afford.''
The exchange, and the failed Republican amendments, may have given some a twinge of déjà vu: Both were strikingly similar to the 2019 debate when PDAB was first approved.
'We're not telling the pharmaceutical companies what they can charge,' Cullison said on March 26, 2019, according to a Maryland Matters account. 'We are telling them what Maryland is willing to pay.'
Despite its creation in 2019, PDAB has little to show to for its efforts so far, due to administrative delays and challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic. It was only last year that the board identified six common prescription drugs that it is currently analyzing the affordability of, but it has not yet negotiated lower costs for any medications.
Republicans are skeptical of the board's ability to reduce costs for Marylanders, and believe it could create more problems than it solves. Among their amendments were two — to ensure that the board's actions do not end up restricting access to life-saving drugs, and to protects parts of the pharmaceutical industry from negative impacts by the board.
'The people in this industry, I don't think any of them are villains,' Minority Leader Jason C. Buckel (R-Allegany) said. 'I don't think any of them are heroes. The pharmaceutical manufacturers, the insurers, the pharmacies, the doctors — all of them take a little cut of where all the money goes. All of them are affected by this in certain ways.'
He offered an amendment that would require the board to certify that its actions would not create access issues for patients. But Cullison noted that the board already considers the potential affect on the supply and access to drugs before moving forward on any actions for cost reduction.
'In the original statute that created the Prescription Drug Affordability Board, the purpose was to protect Marylanders, protect members of the supply chain, including pharmacies, from the high cost of prescription drugs,' she said.
Buckel also offered an amendment to require a study of the effects upper payment limits would have on the biotechnology industry. Both amendments failed on party lines.
Cullison said the board already assesses how its actions might affect both patients and stakeholders in the pharmaceutical industry. That said, Cullison conceded that because the board has not yet implemented any cost reduction efforts, the state does 'not have an example' of the complete outcomes of PDAB actions.
'We have a theory. We have a concept. We're ready to go to test this concept,' she said. 'But I know that we have to do something. We cannot continue at this rate of increase for pharmaceutical drugs.'
Minority Whip Jesse T. Pippy (R-Frederick) offered an amendment to require approval from the state's Legislative Policy Committee before the board can place an upper payment limit on prescription drugs.
'We have no idea how this is going to play out,' Pippy said. 'Simply adding the check and balance as we had in the original legislation … I think is the right decision.
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
'It's a tremendous amount of unknown with a significant amount of consequences if this goes south,' he said.
But Cullison said the Legislative Policy Committee has already weighed in on the upper payment limit process, and the board should not have to seek additional approval.
Pippy's amendment failed, as did the remaining four Republican-sponsored amendments.
The House will likely vote on the bill on HB 424 — which is co-sponsored by Del. Jennifer White Holland (D-Baltimore County) — this week and move it to the Senate, where its fate is less certain.
Senate Bill 357, sponsored by Sen. Dawn Gile (D-Anne Arundel), has yet to move out of the Senate Finance Committee, but Giles believes it will get a committee vote next week. Gile said her staff is 'working out some amendments' on the Senate version of the legislation.
Vincent DeMarco, president of Maryland Health Care for All, said that back in 2019, the Senate was more skeptical of the PDAB proposal. It initially proposed setting up a study of prescription drug affordability challenges and potential options to address the issue, but the chamber agreed to PDAB after the House added the Legislative Policy Committee review and narrowed the board's scope to just state health plans – which the current bill would reverse.
DeMarco said he is 'feeling very hopeful about the Senate' this year.
'We never want to prejudge anything or count any chickens, but based on reactions at the hearing and talking to individual senators, we're feeling hopeful,' he said.
DeMarco also anticipates that the House will approve the legislation with an 'overwhelming vote,' which he says will 'help to move the issue forward in the Senate.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
13 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Democrat Jeffries Delays House Vote on Trump Tax Bill With Marathon Speech
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries is blocking a final vote on Republicans' tax and spending package with a lengthy floor speech bashing the bill. The New Yorker is using his unlimited floor speech privileges to ensure Democratic criticisms of the bill air on popular morning news shows. He began speaking before 5 a.m. in remarks that have gone well beyond a speech expected to last an hour. The longer he talks, the more attention he is likely to draw.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Joe Biden Casually Drops Bombshell About Who's Still Seeking His Advice
Former President Joe Biden claimed that world leaders and U.S. lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are reaching out to him for advice and to ask him to remain active in politics amid the divisive second term of his successor, President Donald Trump. Biden is still involved in politics but now remains behind the scenes, he told the Society for Human Resource Management in San Diego on Wednesday after being asked how he's filling his 'newfound time' since leaving office. . 'I stayed engaged because I really cared about what I was doing. Many things I worked so damn hard [on], that I thought I had changed the country, are changing so rapidly,' Biden said, a reference to Trump's ongoing bid to gut most of his policy achievements. Biden later revealed, 'I'm getting calls. I'm not going to go into it, I can't. From a number of European leaders asking me to get engaged. I'm not, but I'm giving advice. Because things are different. You know, I often ask the question, if America doesn't lead the world, who can? Not a joke. Not because of power. Who could put it together? And mistakes, today, have significantly greater consequences than they did 50 years ago.' 'How can you just walk away?' Biden asked. 'You don't see me out there publicly doing a lot of this. But I'm also dealing with a lot of Democrats and Republican colleagues calling me, wanting to talk, not because they think I have the answer, just to bounce things off me. 'I'm not looking' for it, he added. 'They asked to see me, I see them.' Biden, who in May revealed he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer, also said he's 'working like hell' to write a new, 500-page memoir documenting his presidency. 'They want me to focus just on the four years and talk about what happened and how it impacted on the world and/or if it did.' Top Trump Official's POTUS Praise Goes Viral For Cringiest Reasons Fox News Pundit Asks Most Sycophantic Question About Trump. It Does Not Go Well. Trump Asks DeSantis The Weirdest Question About Marjorie Taylor Greene, In Front Of Her BF
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘Totally Unhinged': Trump Ripped After Bizarre Attack On Lawmaker's ‘Ugly Face'
President Donald Trump on Wednesday launched a wild attack on Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), calling the lawmaker a 'DOPE,' 'TOTAL LOSER,' and a 'bad politician.' He also said Raskin has an 'ugly face.' Trump's tirade came shortly after Raskin appeared on MSNBC, where he spoke about a report indicating that the president wasn't aware that his signature 'big, beautiful bill' would cut Medicaid until a Republican lawmaker pointed it out to him earlier in the day. Raskin said there's a lot of discussion on the floor of the House over just how much Trump knows about his own bill and whether he's 'out of it.' Yet most GOP lawmakers support the bill anyway, even those who aren't happy with it themselves. 'All of these people have gotten in line despite their own misgivings because Trump is leading the way ― but Trump might not even understand what's in the bill,' Raskin said. 'So it's a very dangerous moment when you think about what democracy is, and it doesn't speak well for what has become of the Republican Party.' Yet not everyone in the Republican caucus has backed the bill, and as a key vote stalled late Wednesday, Trump attacked Raskin on Truth Social: Raskin brushed it off during an interview on MSNBC. 'I suppose I don't mind being called a loser several times by Donald Trump, given that he's our only president who has lost the popular vote for president in two different elections,' he told Lawrence O'Donnell. 'And the last time, when he lost by more than 7 million votes to Joe Biden, it upset him so much that he incited an insurrection against the Constitution, against his own vice president, and against the Congress of the United States.' He also had a response to Trump calling him 'ugly.' 'I suppose I don't like being called ugly by Donald Trump, but not everybody can live up to his exquisite levels of handsomeness and personal physical grace,' he said. Trump's critics on X also fired back at the president: Donald Trump lashes out at Congressman Jamie Raskin, calling him a 'dope,' a 'total loser,' and mocking his 'ugly face.'Totally unhinged — Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) July 3, 2025 Just a really disturbed person. Media has normalized his insanity to a ridiculous degree. This (and most of what he does) is not normal. healthy human behavior. — Centrism Fan Acct 🔹 (@Wilson__Valdez) July 3, 2025 Can you remember another time in modern American history where the president of the country attacked an opponent of his for his 'ugly face'? (Also, do you remember when Republicans with clutch their pearls about civility and etiquette?) — Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) July 3, 2025 MAGA is a movement by jerks, for jerks — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 3, 2025 Trump is projecting — again. No world leader speaks about their own officials with such venom. His unhinged rants aren't strength, they're a warning isn't leadership. It's emotional instability wrapped in delusion. America deserves better. — Shahn Khalfan (@ShahnKhalfan) July 3, 2025 When you point your finger at someone else, you point three fingers at yourself. Jesus said to 'love your neighbor as yourself.' Hard, isn't it, Mr. President? Cong. Raskin is a Constitutional expert, the real reason you attack/resent him. @realDonaldTrumphttps:// — Representative Joy Garratt, NM HD29 (@joyousgarratt) July 3, 2025 .@RepRaskin is one of the smartest, kindest, most principled leaders we have - and he has continued to lead through some of the most profound loss a human being can endure. Unlike those who are clinging to cruelty, ego and self interest right now - he has never lost his compass. — Kyra Ellis-Moore (@KyraEllisMoore) July 3, 2025 'I love watching his ugly face.' - the president of the United States of America — Alex Jewell 🧢 (@bestfoodalex) July 3, 2025 The functional illiterate calls the constitutional scholar a dope. — Robert (@avjagfan) July 3, 2025 The walls are red with tomato based products. — The Dr. - ❤️'s Educated Women (@gatesisthedevil) July 3, 2025 Jamie Raskin would eat Donald Trump for lunch in a debate. Raskin is a constitutional lawyer who has taught constitutional law for over 25 years. — Denison Barb (@DenisonBarbs) July 3, 2025 Shame on republicans — On A Bender (@on_bender) July 3, 2025 Trump's tirade isn't just petty—it's part of a pattern. His rhetoric leans hard into violence, personal attacks, and sugar-coated distortions dressed up as 'truth.' Political scientists have tracked a sharp rise in his use of violent language over the years, often rivaling… — SleuthyFella (@SleuthyFella) July 3, 2025 — Tucker&Otis (@Tucker_and_Otis) July 3, 2025 House Republicans Hold Out Against Trump Tax Bill For Hours, Then Cave Big, Blundering Typo Kicked Off Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' Meeting With GOP Rep. Fox News Pundit Asks Most Sycophantic Question About Trump. It Does Not Go Well.