Despite the agency’s prominent role in the nation’s coronavirus response, it has been without a permanent leader since Biden took office in January. Califf would replace acting Commissioner Janet Woodcock, the agency’s longtime drug chief, who has helmed the agency for nine months.
Califf returned to cardiology after his tenure at FDA and currently works for the Duke Clinical Research Institute, but also took a position leading health policy at Google’s parent company Alphabet in 2019.
While he garnered support from many senators in his 2016 confirmation process, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) voiced concerns about his industry ties and said he could oppose the vote. Califf at the time had written papers with pharmaceutical industry executives and consulted for drug and device makers.
“Rob Califf would be a strong, experienced and effective commissioner,” former FDA Commissioner Mark McClellan told POLITICO.
The Washington Post first reported the move.
The next FDA commissioner will be charged with shepherding the country to an eventual end to the Covid-19 pandemic, overseeing the scientists vetting vaccines, therapeutics and tests. Califf also will have to contend with a workforce burned out from the sheer workload and, before that, from attempts by some Trump administration officials to short-circuit the agency’s regulatory process for authorizing those interventions.
This fall and winter the agency is poised to make major decisions on Covid-19 vaccines for children and booster shots for adults, along with treatments for the disease — such as Merck’s antiviral drug molnupiravir.
The FDA also is navigating sweeping new e-cigarette policies, building a framework for regulating cannabidiol and vastly broadening its oversight of over-the-counter products.
“It will be valuable to have a permanent commissioner, because the agency faces many changes, which Covid-19 has exacerbated,” said Carl Tobias, a former FDA consultant and current Williams Chair at Richmond University Law. “Woodcock was an effective acting commissioner. But Biden and the agency need a permanent leader.”
Woodcock, who joined the FDA in 1986, was rumored to be in contention for the permanent commissioner job. But although she counts many supporters in the Senate, a handful of Democrats including Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) opposed her nomination because of her role in the agency’s handling of the opioid crisis.
Califf previously worked closely with Biden on the Cancer Moonshot initiative launched by the Obama administration. Califf also has a long history with North Carolina, noted Alston & Bird attorney Marc Scheineson, who previously served as FDA associate commissioner for legislative affairs under former FDA Commissioner David Kessler.
“Califf should have an inside track for a lot of different reasons,” Scheineson said. “Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) can help smooth a confirmation … to have North Carolina’s senator as the ranking member on the committee that confirms him is very important.”
But consumer advocacy group Public Citizen slammed Califf as a “recycled FDA Commissioner pick” with close ties to the pharmaceutical industry.
“The country desperately needs an FDA leader who will reverse the decades-long trend in which the agency’s relationship with the pharmaceutical and medical-device industries has grown dangerously cozier – resulting in regulatory capture of the agency by industry,” Michael Carome, director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, said in a statement. “Califf would not be that leader.”
Lauren Gardner contributed to this report.