On April 2, the House International Relations Committee approved, 37-8, legislation (H.R. 1298) that would provide assistance for international HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB), and malaria programs.
Sponsored by Rep. Henry Hyde (R-IL), H.R. 1298 would authorize the request outlined in the President’s State of the Union Address for $15 billion over the next five years to “prevent 7 million new AIDS infections, treat at least 2 million people with life-extending drugs and provide humane care for millions of people suffering from AIDS and for children orphaned by AIDS” (see The Source, 1/31/03).
H.R. 1298 also would require the Department of State to establish a Coordinator of U.S. Government Activities to Combat HIV/AIDS Globally. The coordinator would be appointed by the President and would be responsible for the oversight and coordination of all U.S. efforts to combat HIV/AIDS internationally.
The bill contains a number of congressional findings that state “women are four times more vulnerable to infection than are men and are becoming infected at increasingly high rates, in part because many societies do not provide poor women and young girls with the social, legal, and cultural protections against high risk activities that expose them to HIV/AIDS.”
Another congressional finding states that “mother-to-child transmission is largely preventable with the proper application of pharmaceuticals, therapies, and other public health interventions.” H.R. 1298 would require the President to submit an annual report on the Administration’s efforts to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS.
Committee Chair Hyde noted that members “are here to build on the bipartisan work accomplished last year.” He added that H.R. 1298 is “a bill that, for the first time authorizes treatment for more than 2 million people; a bill that takes the necessary step of creating a single coordinator to ensure cohesion and unity of effort among the various agencies of the United States government that can contribute to our overall AIDS effort.”
Ranking Member Tom Lantos (D-CA) added, “Today’s mark-up is truly historic. This morning we are considering perhaps the most ambitious piece of legislation in this committee’s long history.”
The committee approved, by voice vote, a manager’s amendment that would provide $3 billion in each of FY2004 through FY2008 for HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria programs. Of this amount, up to $1 billion could be used for the Global Fund to Combat AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria in FY2004.
Under the bill, prevention, treatment, and educational activities would include:
Rep. Joseph Pitts (R-PA) offered an amendment that would have given funding priority to prevention programs that promote abstinence over those that condone condom use. Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) offered a secondary amendment that would also include condom use as a priority in prevention efforts. After approving the Lee amendment by a vote of 24-20, the committee approved, by voice vote, the modified Pitts amendment.
Another amendment offered by Rep. Pitts would have allowed funding for faith-based groups even if they advocate abstinence over condom use. The amendment failed, 21-23.
A number of other amendments were approved by voice vote, including:
Another amendment offered by Rep. Christopher Smith (R-NJ) was approved, 24-22. The Smith amendment would require that HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention organizations explicitly oppose prostitution and sex trafficking in order to receive funding. Rep. Lantos offered a secondary amendment to block the Smith amendment; however, the Lantos amendment failed by a vote of 21-22.