Global health advocates are losing an ally in Congress: Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who lost her Senate bid earlier this year, is leaving after more than 25 years in Congress, where she helped set up and champion the U.S. global AIDS program known as PEPFAR. “We made a lot of progress. We saved 25 million lives. That’s remarkable,” she said about the program’s results. The global HIV community celebrated her at the International AIDS Conference in Munich, Germany, in July by awarding her the inaugural Barbara Lee Political Leadership Award. Every two years, the prize, awarded by the International AIDS Society, will recognize elected officials from around the world who have demonstrated significant political leadership and commitment to the AIDS fight. Here’s what Lee, who is the top Democrat in the House Appropriations State and Foreign Operations Subcommittee, told Carmen as she looks back at her political career and works to elect the first female president in U.S. history in her last months in office: — Republicans must step up in support of PEPFAR and help reauthorize it for another five years. The program received a one-year extension this year because of some House Republicans’ concern that it was indirectly funding or promoting abortion, which government officials and PEPFAR beneficiaries and supporters have denied. Republicans need to be “authentic and committed” and acknowledge that the link between PEPFAR and abortion is a result of misinformation, she said. “Because nothing has changed. The language is the same,” she said about the program’s initiatives. — Pandemic preparedness and reproductive health are top priorities in the years ahead. “We’ve got to end the global gag rule, the Mexico City language, and make sure that U.S. dollars are allowed for accessing all reproductive health care, which includes abortion care,” she said about the longstanding U.S. law banning global health aid to be used for performing or promoting abortion. Lee is a surrogate for Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign and hopes the House and the Senate will have leaders who would want to strike down that rule from U.S. law. But to do that, they must all be Democrats, seen as a long shot. — She doesn’t want to talk about what comes next for her. “I’m forging ahead, between now and November. The election, I’m focused on that. Call me later and I’ll talk about what’s next.”
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