It's hard to understand why Scott Morrison chooses to lie so often when he must know how easily he is caught out.
It is easier to understand why he is so frequently attracted to dubious characters - he is the type of overly confident self-important man who is often identified by such individuals as an easy 'mark'.
On
the morning of Wednesday 19 August 2020……
Australian
Prime Minister Scott Morrison,
media
release,
19
August 2020:
Australians
will be among the first in the world to receive a COVID-19 vaccine,
if it proves successful, through an agreement between the Australian
Government and UK-based drug company AstraZeneca.
Under
the deal, every single Australian will be able to receive the
University of Oxford COVID-19 vaccine for free, should trials prove
successful, safe and effective…..
|
Scotty From Marketing played dress-ups to make his vaccine announcement
Mask & full lab coat
IMAGE: ABC News, 20 August 2020 |
Australians
are a step closer to accessing a coronavirus vaccine for free, after
the Federal Government secured a major international deal to produce
a vaccine frontrunner locally, should trials succeed.
Amid
rising pressure to lock in supply of a coronavirus vaccine, the
Government has signed an agreement with UK-based drug company
AstraZeneca to secure the potential COVID-19 vaccine developed by
Oxford University, if its trials prove successful.
Prime
Minister Scott Morrison said if the vaccine succeeded, the Government
would manufacture it immediately and make it free for all
Australians.
"The
Oxford vaccine is one of the most advanced and promising in the
world, and under this deal we have secured early access for every
Australian," he said……
In
the evening of Wednesday 19 August 2020….
The Daily Telegraph, 19 August 2020:
"Drug
company AstraZeneca says Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s claim he
has reached a deal to secure 25 million doses of the Oxford
University vaccine is not true."
Then there is the pharmaceutical company Morrison named....
London-based pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca is the result of the 1999 merger of Britain’s Zeneca, a spinoff of the old Imperial Chemical Industries specializing in cancer medications, and Sweden’s Astra AB, which was best known for the ulcer and heartburn medication Prilosec. Since that deal, the combined company has been embroiled in numerous controversies over illegal marketing, product safety, anticompetitive behavior and tax avoidance.
Advertising and Marketing Controversies
In 2003 federal officials announced that AstraZeneca had pleaded guilty to criminal and civil charges relating to the illegal marketing of the prostate cancer drug Zoladex. The company agreed to pay $355 million, consisting of $64 million in criminal fines, a $266 million settlement of civil False Claims Act charges, and a $25 million settlement of fraud charges relating to state Medicaid programs. AstraZeneca, which agreed to enter into a corporate integrity agreement with the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, had been accused of giving illegal financial inducements such as grants and honoraria to physicians.
In 2004 a coalition of consumer groups filed suit against AstraZeneca in a California state court, arguing that advertising for the company’s acid reflux drug Nexium misled consumers into thinking that it was superior to AstraZeneca’s Prilosec. The company had introduced Nexium to replace Prilosec as the latter drug was losing its patent protection. The case, along with a related one filed in Massachusetts, is pending.
Also in 2004, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) found that AstraZeneca’s full-page newspaper advertisements defending the safety of its Crestor cholesterol medication were “false and misleading.” The warning letter sent by the agency to AstraZeneca took issue not only with what the company said about the drug but also the way it represented the FDA’s position on Crestor.
In 2010 the U.S. Justice Department announced that AstraZeneca would pay $520 million to resolve allegations that it illegally marketed its anti-psychotic drug Seroquel for uses not approved as safe and effective by the FDA. Under the terms of the settlement, $302 million of the total was to go to the federal government and $218 million to state Medicaid programs. Among other things, the company was accused of having paid doctors to give speeches and publish articles (ghostwritten by the company) promoting those unapproved uses. AstraZeneca agreed to sign a corporate integrity agreement regarding its future behavior. In 2011 AstraZeneca settled a related Seroquel case brought by state governments by agreeing to pay another $69 million.
Product Safety
In 2002 AstraZeneca said it would put a more conspicuous warning label on its lung cancer drug Iressa after several patients in Japan suffered pneumonia and some died.
In 2003 researchers at the University of Illinois-Chicago released the results of research concluding that AstraZeneca’s Seroquel and two other schizophrenia drugs made by other companies created an elevated risk for diabetes. Subsequently, more than 25,000 lawsuits were filed against the company. In 2010 the company said it would pay a total of $198 million to settle those cases. That same year, the UK’s Prescription Medicines Code of Practice Authority found that AstraZeneca had failed to adequately describe the risks of Seroquel in an advertisement for the drug in a medical journal.
In 2004 the watchdog group Public Citizen urged the federal government to ban AstraZeneca’s new cholesterol drug Crestor because of evidence linking it to the life-threatening muscle condition rhabdomyolysis. Noting that the company had not submitted timely reports to the FDA on some two dozen serious adverse reactions to Crestor, Public Citizen also called for a criminal investigation of the company. A 2005 study performed at Tufts University found that Crestor users had more serious side effects than those taking other cholesterol drugs.
Also in 2004, an FDA review of AstraZeneca’s new blood thinner Exanta questioned the safety and effectiveness of the drug.
Pricing and Anticompetitive Behavior
......In
2003 the European Commission accused AstraZeneca of misusing patent
rules to shield its ulcer drug Losec (Prilosec in the United States)
from generic competitors. The company was charged with having
misstated the year the drug was introduced in order to make it
eligible for an extension of its exclusivity rights. In 2005 the
commission fined AstraZeneca 60 million euros, a penalty which was
upheld by the European Court of Justice in 2012.
In
2007 a federal judge ruled in a national class action case that
AstraZeneca and two other companies had to pay damages in connection
with overcharging Medicare and private insurance companies. The judge
singled out AstraZeneca for acting “unfairly and deceptively” in
its pricing of prostate cancer drug Zoladex. AstraZeneca was later
hit with a $12.9 million judgment. In 2010 AstraZeneca agreed to pay
$103 million to settle a national lawsuit accusing the company of
overcharging for Zoladex and Pulmicort Respules asthma medication.
In
2009 AstraZeneca was one of four drug companies that entered into a
settlement agreement under which they agreed to pay a total of $124
million to settle charges that they violated the federal False Claims
Act by failing to provide required rebates to state Medicaid
programs. AstraZeneca’s share of the total settlement amount was
$2.6 million.....
Read the full history of this company's behaviour here.