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NEW YORK (AP) — The annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative was inaugurated by former President Bill Clinton on Wednesday, where he shared a list of concerns.
Clinton expressed that ignoring the rise of political violence would be highly irresponsible and startling, referencing the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk and the former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman alongside her spouse, Mark. “We’re pulling further and further away from one another,” he remarked.
He voiced his apprehensions over the deconstruction of domestic and foreign aid programs, the undermining of science and public health, the reduction of educational funding, trade conflicts, and the potential threat to freedom of speech.
“We’re trying to do everything we can to provide a counterweight to a lot of the negative things that have taken place in the last several months,” Clinton stated in relation to the two-day conference, which revised its format to incorporate working groups addressing many of the challenges he mentioned.
The most notable announcement on Wednesday was the collaboration between the Clinton Health Access Initiative, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, Unitaid, and Wits RHI, which aims to deliver Gilead Sciences’ HIV prevention drug lenacapavir at a cost of $40 per person annually in 120 low- and middle-income countries starting in 2027. A similar agreement was announced by the Gates Foundation with the Indian manufacturer Hetero Labs.
According to Clinton, this initiative partly responds to foreign aid reductions implemented during President Donald Trump’s administration, which endangers over 6 million more potential HIV cases and about 4 million additional deaths in Africa. In July, GOP leaders averted another $400 million reduction to PEPFAR, a vital program against HIV/AIDS that has saved numerous lives since its inception under President George W. Bush.
Points of Light Chairman Neil Bush said PEPFAR and the way it has helped so many in Africa has always been a point of family pride. And though he hasn’t talked to his brother, former President George W. Bush, about the new program announced at the Clinton Global Initiative, Neil Bush said he sees it as a way philanthropy can help fill in gaps.
“It seems like America’s withdrawal from the world is having terrible ramifications, in my personal view,” he said, adding that Points of Light hopes to increase the help it provides through its ambitious plan to double the number of volunteers in America in the next 10 years.
Activist and philanthropist Abigail Disney urged Clinton Global Initiative attendees to be more aggressive in their giving and encouraged them to support cultural movements instead of programs.
“I don’t care where you are on the political spectrum — there is mistrust, there’s fear and there is anger, and we should all be very alarmed,” Disney said. “And I hang around big philanthropies these days and I don’t see any alarm. I don’t think that’s because they’re not alarmed. I think that’s because they’re afraid. Everybody’s afraid.”
However, President Clinton said that the Clinton Global Initiative, which launched in 2005, has always looked to create solutions.
“If we hold our heads high, keep our eyes and ears open and deal with others with an outstretched hand and not a clenched fist, we’ve got a chance to keep hope alive,” he said. “We have the chance to make a meaningful difference in other people’s lives.”
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