Johnson under fire over praise for ‘greed’ in vaccine development

The Prime Minister made the comments at a private meeting of Tory MPs, but then hastily sought to backtrack.
Boris Johnson
PA Wire
David Hughes24 March 2021

Vaccine campaigners have accused Boris Johnson of a “warped” understanding of the crisis after he joked that “greed” and capitalism had contributed to the success of the jabs.

The Prime Minister made the comments at a private meeting of Tory MPs, but then hastily sought to backtrack as he praised AstraZeneca for supplying the Oxford vaccine at cost.

Following Mr Johnson’s comments to the 1922 Committee on Tuesday night, the Global Justice Now campaign, which is campaigning for wider international access to jabs, hit out at the Prime Minister.

The organisation’s director Nick Dearden said: “The Prime Minister will call this comment a slip of the tongue, but it’s an incredibly revealing remark.

“It shows just how warped his understanding of this crisis is.

“We have a vaccine because of massive public investment and the remarkable work of scientists at publicly-funded universities. We’ve rolled it out because of our incredible National Health Service.

“Greed, however, drove big pharma to privatise this work and withhold doses from millions worldwide to protect their profits.

“And, if Boris Johnson keeps letting it happen, there’ll be more coronavirus mutations that could send us back to square one.”

Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester and former health secretary Andy Burnham said: “Celebrating ‘greed’ in a pandemic? Same old Tories.”

Plaid Cymru’s Westminster leader Liz Saville Roberts said: “It’s in the throwaway comments that the PM reveals himself. Greed will destroy us.”

Labour MP Barry Sheerman said the comments were “no surprise” as “everyone who knows our Prime Minister well understands his admiration of selfishness and greed'”.

Former shadow cabinet minister Richard Burgon said Mr Johnson was “wrong” as “billions in public funds went into developing the vaccines”.

“Now the vaccine patents must be waived to ramp up production and save lives all across the world,” the Labour MP said.

Coronavirus vaccine graphic
PA Graphics

The comments also risk inflaming a row with the European Commission over access to vaccines, with the organisation’s president Ursula von der Leyen threatening a ban on exports of jabs to the UK because it is angry that AstraZeneca has not supplied the doses expected for the bloc.

Home Secretary Priti Patel defended the role played by pharmaceutical companies.

She told Sky News: “The Prime Minister always acknowledges the strong success we’ve had in terms of the vaccine, not just the rollout, which is incredible, but also our ability as a country to develop the vaccine, the role that pharmaceutical companies and science and technology has played in that.

“And actually I think that speaks to a great strength we have as a country.

“And linked to that, of course, look at our contributions to Covax, the international scheme, to get the vaccine supplies elsewhere and demonstrate that we are a very, very strong force for good internationally when it comes to vaccines, science and pharmaceutical development.”

Wales Office minister David Davies said the comment had been “totally out of context” and was a reference to the movie Wall Street, in which Michael Douglas’ character Gordon Gekko said “greed, for lack of a better word, is good”.

Jane Halton, co-chairwoman of the Covax initiative which is working to provide jabs for low and middle-income countries, said the UK has been “altruistic” with its investment in vaccine development.

Asked about the Prime Minister’s “greed” comments which were first reported by The Sun, Ms Halton told Times Radio: “I haven’t heard those remarks and I would suggest that it’s never wise to comment on the alleged comments of somebody.”

But she said the UK’s support for vaccine research and development had shown a “pretty significant level of altruism and forward thinking demonstrated here because we would not have these vaccines now if we hadn’t made those investments”.

“It’s because of that money that was spent, that we can now vaccinate people.”

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