Laura Bush on AIDS, Malaria

October 30th, 2007 at 9:46 am | posted by Virginia Simmons

First Lady Laura Bush talked about PEPFAR and the President’s Malaria Initiative on the Chris Wallace show on Sunday. Watch the clip here. (Note, it may take a few minutes for the full video to load.)

Laura Bush 10/28 on Chris Wallace Show

From the interview:

Laura Bush: But many of the policies that I’ve had the chance to visit, like the PEPFAR, the president’s emergency plan for AIDS relief, or the president’s malaria initiative in Africa, are policies that really came from him, I mean, that he felt like the United States could be effective by making sure a whole lot of people in Africa had the chance to get on antiretrovirals and literally save lives.

And my daughter Barbara was in Kenya and Rwanda this week. She went with the World Food Program. And I visited some World Food Program sites and PEPFAR sites.

And she said that when she was introduced, this made her weep. People would say your dad saved my life, because they’re very aware they’re getting antiretrovirals because of the president’s emergency plan which, of course, is funded by the American people, by the American taxpayer.

Chris Wallace: Nancy Reagan once told me that during her husband’s second term, she felt freer to go out to talk about public policy and her views on them, and you seem to be doing the same thing. Why is that?

Laura Bush: Well, I don’t know that it’s — I mean, I think I felt perfectly free during the first term as well to talk about whatever I was interested in. But I also think it took me a while to realize what a platform I had.

You can read the full transcript here.

One Response to “Laura Bush on AIDS, Malaria”

  1. Brad Ogilvie Says:

    I think it’s great the George, Laura and Barbara are looking at AIDS in Africa. I can’t help but be suspect of their motivations or their choices of arenas when they say so little about the very city they live in (Washington, DC), where one out of every twenty people has HIV, and where many classrooms have no air conditioning or heat, and where classrooms don’t have computers, and where parents with HIV are shooting up in the parks adjacent to their children’s schools. I wonder what it’s going to take to bridge this divide between the White House and inner-city Washington, and I wonder what other blinders remain in-tact in Laura’s work in Africal

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