From the outset, Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald was an odd choice to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. After Donald Trump appointed her to the important position, we learned, for example, that she’s been accused of practicing “a fringe branch of medicine that promises to reverse the effects of natural aging.”
Making matters slightly worse, when Fitzgerald was Georgia’s health commissioner, she took steps to combat high rates of child obesity by partnering with Coca-Cola.
But Fitzgerald’s real problem was her finances. Not long after she took control over the CDC, it became obvious that Fitzgerald’s investments were interfering with her duties and causing her to recuse herself from key policy areas.
Those investments became far more controversial yesterday when Politico reported that Fitzgerald bought shares in a tobacco company — after she became CDC director. As Richard Painter, who served as George W. Bush’s chief ethics lawyer, put it, “You don’t buy tobacco stocks when you are the head of the CDC. It’s ridiculous.”
It appears Painter wasn’t the only one who thoughts so. CNBC reported this morning that Fitzgerald is out.
The head of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention resigned Wednesday on the heels of a bombshell report that she had purchased stock in a tobacco company soon after taking her job, which oversees smoking-cessation programs.
Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald, who is an ob-gyn, also had owned stock in other tobacco companies prior to assuming her post almost six months ago as one of the nation’s top health officials.









