Trump Under Fire for
Dismissing Entire HIV/AIDS Council by FedEx Letter
In
a decision denounced as "dangerous" and "appalling," President Donald Trump has
enraged members of the public health and LGBTQ communities by reportedly firing the remaining
16 members of his HIV/AIDS council in letters delivered to them by FedEx on
December 28.
Six
members of the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA) had resigned in protest earlier this year,
as Common Dreams reported, on the grounds that the Trump
administration "has no strategy to address the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic,
seeks zero input from experts to formulate HIV policy, and—most
concerning—pushes legislation that will harm people living with HIV and halt or
reverse important gains made in the fight against this disease."
Scott
Schoettes, a Lambda Legal senior attorney who resigned from PACHA in June,
tweeted about Thursday's firings, claiming Trump has "no respect for their
service" and warning about what future HIV/AIDS policy may look like under
this president:
Gabriel Maldonado, head of the LGBTQ and HIV/AIDS group Truevolution and a remaining member of PACHA, confirmed the firings to the Washington Blade, but added that the "explanation is still unclear" and "I can only speculate" as to why they were dismissed.
"Like
any administration, they want their own people there," Maldonado said,
acknowledging "ideological and philosophical differences" and that
many of the remaining members, including her, were appointed by former
President Barack Obama.
"I
was co-chair of the disparities committee," Maldonado added, "so much
of my advocacy and policy references surrounded vulnerable populations,
addressing issuing of diverse communities, specifically looking at the impacts
of the LGBT community, namely, the disproportionate impact of HIV and AIDS to
people of color, gay men, transgender women...and a lot of those key vulnerable
populations are not being prioritized in this administration."
Sources
close to the decision told Newsweek "they
suspect the charter for PACHA will be re-written with renewed focus on
abstinence and religious, non-evidence based public health
approaches."
Newsweek noted that while the Obama administration also dismissed all panel members who were appointed by his predecessor, George W. Bush, the current administration has been particularly complacent on the issue, and "Trump has yet to appoint an HIV/AIDS chief, the first time since Bill Clinton created the position in 1993 that a president has failed to do so."
Newsweek noted that while the Obama administration also dismissed all panel members who were appointed by his predecessor, George W. Bush, the current administration has been particularly complacent on the issue, and "Trump has yet to appoint an HIV/AIDS chief, the first time since Bill Clinton created the position in 1993 that a president has failed to do so."
Critics
swiftly denounced the firings on social media, including one who noted that with this decision, the
Trump "administration appears to be blatantly admitting it will do nothing
about HIV/AIDS epidemic."
Some
accused the president of trying to appease his more religious supporters, while
others noted Vice President Mike Pence's influence over the administration and
his track record on HIV/AIDS.