Hillary Clinton has found a useful enemy in Turing Pharmaceuticals, the once obscure and now infamous drug company that jacked up the price on a old drug used to treat a range of diseases from parasitic infection to AIDS.
Clinton rolled out a plan last week leek aimed at limiting the amount of money people spend on drugs. Her plan’s announcement came just after a New York Times story highlighted Turing’s plans to raise the cost of drug called Daraprim overnight a whopping 5,000%.
Clinton made the company and the price hike exhibit A in the case for her drug plan, and she made its CEO the poster child of pharma executives run amok. Even if CEO Mark Shkreli is hardly representative of the drug industry (he’s a 32-year-old serial entrepreneur) it would be difficult to invent a better political foil than Shkreli, who had created a long trail of disgruntled investors long before he bought the intellectual property rights to Daraprim.
RELATED: Turing to roll back pricing for Daraprim amid controversy
In the face of public outcry following the Times story, Shkreli said last week he would lower the price of the drug, though he did not say by how much. But Clinton is not done with Shkreli yet.








