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Congressman Off-Base in Ad Claiming Fauci Shipped Covid to Montana Before the Pandemic
蘑菇影院 Health News & PolitiFact HealthCheck

Congressman Off-Base in Ad Claiming Fauci Shipped Covid to Montana Before the Pandemic

鈥淚T’S BEEN REVEALED THAT FAUCI BROUGHT COVID TO THE MONTANA ONE YEAR BEFORE COVID BROKE OUT IN THE U.S!鈥

An ad from the Matt Rosendale for Montana campaign

A fundraising ad for U.S. Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) shows a photo of Anthony Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, behind bars, swarmed by flying bats.

Rosendale, who is eyeing a challenge to incumbent Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat, maintains that a Montana biomedical research facility, Rocky Mountain Laboratories in Hamilton, has a dangerous link to the pandemic. This claim is echoed :

鈥淚t’s been revealed that Fauci brought COVID to the Montana one year before COVID broke out in the U.S!,鈥 it charges in all-caps before asking readers to 鈥淒onate today and hold the D.C. bureaucracy accountable!鈥

The ad, paid for by Matt Rosendale for Montana, seeks contributions through WinRed, a platform that processes donations for Republican candidates. Rosendale also shared the fundraising pitch , and it remained live as of early February.

Rosendale made similar accusations on social media, during on the U.S. House floor, and through his congressional office. Sometimes his comments, like those on the House floor, are milder, saying the researchers experimented on 鈥渁 coronavirus鈥 leading up to the pandemic. Other times, as in with One America News Network, he linked the lab鈥檚 work to covid-19鈥檚 spread.

In that interview clip, Rosendale recounted pandemic-era shutdowns before saying, “And now we’re finding out that the National Institute of Health, Rocky Mountain Lab, down in Hamilton, Montana, had also played a role in this.”

Rosendale鈥檚 statements echo broader efforts to scrutinize how research into viruses happens in the United States and is part of a continued wave of backlash against scientists who have studied coronaviruses. Rosendale is considering seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Tester, in that could help determine which party controls the Senate in 2025. Political newcomer Tim Sheehy is also seeking the Republican nomination for the Senate.

Rosendale proposed amendments to a health spending bill that would ban pandemic-related pathogen research funding for Rocky Mountain Laboratories and cut the salary of one of its top researchers, virologist Vincent Munster, to $1. The House has included both amendments in the Health and Human Services budget bill that the Republican majority hopes to pass. A temporary spending bill is funding the health department until March.

We contacted Rosendale鈥檚 congressional office multiple times 鈥 with emails, a phone call, and an online request 鈥 asking what proof he had to back up his statements that the Montana lab infected bats with covid from China before the outbreak. We got no reply.

Kathy Donbeck, of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases鈥 Office of Communications and Government Relations, said in an email that the ad鈥檚 claims are false. Interviews with virologists and a review of the research paper published shortly before Rosendale鈥檚 assertions support that position.

Where This Is Coming From

Rosendale鈥檚 statements seem to stem from a Rocky Mountain Laboratories study from 2016 that looked into how a coronavirus, WIV1-CoV, acted in Egyptian fruit bats. The work, in 2018, showed that the specific strain didn鈥檛 cause a robust infection in the bats.

The study did not receive widespread attention at the time. But on Oct. 30, 2023, the study was highlighted called White Coat Waste Project, which says its mission is to stop taxpayer-funded experiments on animals. Some right-wing media outlets began to connect the Montana lab with the coronavirus that causes covid.

Rosendale鈥檚 office issued an saying the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China 鈥渟hipped a strain of coronavirus鈥 to the Hamilton lab. 鈥淥ur government helped create the Wuhan flu, then shut the country down when it escaped from the lab,鈥 Rosendale said.

It鈥檚 a Different Virus

Rocky Mountain Laboratories is a federally funded facility as part of NIAID, the nation鈥檚 top infectious disease research agency, which Fauci led for nearly 40 years.

According to the study and Donbeck鈥檚 email, the Montana researchers focused on a coronavirus called WIV1-CoV, not the covid-causing SARS-CoV-2. They鈥檙e different viruses.

鈥淭he genetics of the viruses are very different, and their behavior biologically is very different,鈥 said , a virologist with Pennsylvania State University who has studied the evolution of pandemic influenza viruses.

In a review of media reports on the Montana study, Health Feedback, a network of scientists that fact-checks health and medical media coverage, indicated that WIV1 鈥渋s not a direct ancestor or even a close relative of SARS-CoV-2.鈥

Additionally, the description of the coronavirus strain as being 鈥渟hipped鈥 suggests that it physically traveled across the world. That鈥檚 not what happened.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology provided the WIV1 virus鈥檚 sequence that allowed researchers to make a lab-grown copy. A separate study, published in , outlines the origins of the lab-created virus.

According to the study鈥檚 methodology, the researchers used a clone of WIV1. , a media company, said the virus 鈥渨as generated using common laboratory techniques, based on genetic information that was publicly shared by Chinese scientists.鈥

, a University of Iowa professor who studies coronaviruses and serves on the that reviews vaccines, said Rosendale鈥檚 claim is off-base.

He said Rosendale鈥檚 focus on where the lab got its materials is irrelevant and serves 鈥渙nly to make people wary and scared.鈥

Rosendale鈥檚 efforts to prohibit particular research at Rocky Mountain Laboratories appear ill-informed, too. Rosendale targeted banning gain-of-function research, which involves altering a pathogen to study its spread. In her email, NIAID鈥檚 Donbeck said the Rocky Mountain Laboratories study didn鈥檛 involve gain-of-function research.

This type of research has long been controversial, and people who study viruses have said the definition of 鈥済ain of function鈥 is problematic and insufficient to show when research, or even work to create vaccines, could cross into that type of research.

But both Sutton and Perlman said that, any way you look at it, the Rocky Mountain Laboratories study published in 2018 didn鈥檛 change the virus. It put a virus in bats and showed it didn鈥檛 grow.

And it had no effect on the covid outbreak a year later, first detected in Washington state.

Our Ruling

Rosendale鈥檚 ad said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 been revealed that Fauci brought COVID to the Montana one year before COVID broke out in the U.S!鈥 The campaign ad and Rosendale鈥檚 similar statements refer to research at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories involving WIV1, a coronavirus that researchers say is not even distantly close in genetic structure to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused covid-19.

Rosendale鈥檚 claim is wrong about when the scientists began their work, what they were studying, and where they got the materials. The researchers began their work in 2016 and, although they were studying a coronavirus, it wasn鈥檛 the virus that causes covid. The Montana scientists used a lab-grown clone of WIV1 for their research. The first laboratory-confirmed case of covid was not detected in the U.S. until . Rosendale鈥檚 ad is inaccurate and ridiculous. We rate it Pants on Fire!

Sources:

Viruses, 鈥,鈥 Dec. 19, 2018

White Coat Waste Project, 鈥,鈥 Oct. 30, 2023

, Nov. 1, 2023

, accessed Dec. 14, 2023

Rep. Matt Rosendale, , Nov. 14, 2023

, accessed Dec. 14, 2023

Rosendale congressional office, 鈥,鈥 Oct. 31, 2023

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, 鈥,鈥 accessed Dec. 14, 2023

Email exchange with NIAID, beginning Dec. 14, 2023

provided to Lee Enterprises, accessed Jan. 2, 2024

Nature, 鈥,鈥 Oct. 30, 2013

Ravalli Republic, 鈥,鈥 Nov. 17, 2023

Interview, Troy Sutton, assistant professor of veterinary and biomedical sciences at Pennsylvania State University, Jan. 5, 2024

Interview, Stanley Perlman, professor of microbiology and immunology and professor of pediatrics at the University of Iowa, Jan. 13, 2024

FDA, 鈥,鈥 accessed Jan. 16, 2024

Health Feedback, 鈥,鈥 last accessed Jan. 17, 2024

Email exchange with OpenSecrets, an independent research group tracking money in politics, beginning Jan. 30, 2024

, accessed Feb. 2, 2024