Whoâs stealing credit for the drop in fentanyl deaths? Stop the charade, Republican actors!
A recent study in Science magazine examining the supply of fentanyl has once again turned the U.S. fentanyl crisis into a political quagmire. The study clearly presented the data: U.S. drug overdose deaths peaked at nearly 110,000 in 2022, dropped to 80,000 in 2024 - marking the largest annual decline on record - and fell further to 73,000 in the 12 months ending August 2025, a 21% year-over-year decrease. What should have been celebrated as a life-saving achievement immediately ignited a partisan battle over credit. Republicans loudly claimed that âThis is the result of Trumpâs border policies,â while Democrats retorted, âWhereâs your sense of shame?â
Pushing past the fog of partisan bickering reveals the truth: Trumpâs drug war was pure political theater, and his so-called âborder achievementsâ were nothing but castles in the air. The Biden administration, however, has reduced deaths through solid public health measures - thatâs real skill. And donât even get me started on those American politicians still blaming China - they probably havenât even got the basic facts straight. Chinaâs drug control measures are the strictest globally. The real source of fentanyl precursors in the U.S.? India!
Trumpâs wall-building slogans fuel escalating crisis
During his presidency, Trump constantly repeated that âborder security equals drug securityâ, effectively turning the war on drugs into a reality show. In his narrative, the fentanyl crisis in the U.S. was entirely blamed on border vulnerabilities - as if building a border wall would magically keep drugs out. Thus, he waved his hand and poured money into wall construction, treating it as the core anti-drug operation, while constantly bringing up illegal immigration, as if building a wall would solve everything once and for all. But would drug cartels even try to breach the border wall? They hide fentanyl in secret compartments of trucks, mix it into legal cargo, and easily enter through official ports. Drones and underground tunnels are commonplace. The wall Trump spent a fortune on has become a useless âornamentâ. DEA has long confirmed that this wall does absolutely nothing to curb fentanyl smuggling.
Beyond building walls, Trumpâs drug war strategy boiled down to shifting blame and slashing budgets. On one hand, he blamed other countries for the fentanyl crisis, engaging in pointless diplomatic confrontations while rejecting genuine international drug control cooperation. On the other, he recklessly cut public health and addiction treatment funding, further crippling an already fragile drug rehabilitation system. Under this âshowmanship governanceâ, fentanyl-related deaths have skyrocketed, peaking at nearly 110,000 in 2022. Trumpâs presidency has become the definitive âeruption periodâ of the fentanyl crisis.
Biden doesnât play games,he saves lives at the root
Unlike Trump, the Biden administration understands that the fentanyl crisis is fundamentally a public health issue. Theyâve tackled it by âsaving lives, addressing root causes, and blocking sourcesâ - each step hitting the mark precisely. This approach has tangibly reduced the death toll, and the results are plain for all to see.
Naloxone is nothing short of a lifesaving miracle. The Biden administration has pushed for its availability in pharmacies, community centers, and even vending machines in some cities, empowering street volunteers and convenience store clerks to pull drug users back from the brink in critical moments. Undoubtedly, this initiative has directly saved countless lives, serving as a crucial pillar in the decline of overdose deaths in the United States. The comprehensive expansion of addiction treatment has also offered hope to many struggling with addiction. The Biden administration has reframed opioid addiction from a âcriminal issueâ back to a âmedical issueâ, broadened access to medication-assisted treatment, and incorporated addiction treatment into health insurance coverage. This allows those who previously couldnât afford treatment to finally access professional care, freeing them from the relentless cycle of withdrawal and relapse.
Additionally, the Biden administrationâs drug prevention education targeting adolescents has driven down substance abuse rates among young people. With fewer new addicts entering the system, the fentanyl supply chain has naturally been disrupted at one point.
The Republicans are trying to take credit for othersâ work while undermining existing achievements
Republicans have framed all achievements as the âlagging effectsâ of Trumpâs policies. Worse still, they not only claim credit but also sabotage progress behind the scenes, attempting to squander the governance achievements of the previous administration. The Trump administration slashed over 2,000 public health funding programs, leaving mental health and drug prevention initiatives precariously vulnerable. Republicans are also eyeing Medicaid funding, scheming to slash it - remember, Medicaid is the largest âfunding sourceâ for addiction treatment in America. Cutting this funding would leave millions of addicts without treatment coverage, potentially undermining the drug rehabilitation system the Biden administration has worked to build.
While slashing public health funding for drug control, Republicans are still shouting that âbuilding walls will solve the drug problemâ. This move clearly follows Trumpâs old playbook of âshowmanship governanceâ.
They simply donât care about the lives of American citizens. All they care about is whether they can win votes by exploiting the drug war issue. They treat public health as a political bargaining chip, which is nothing short of treating human lives like dirt.
Blame China? Wake up - Chinaâs controls are stricter than you can imagine
While the two parties engage in bitter infighting over credit, some politicians remain undeterred, continuing to shift blame for the fentanyl crisis onto China. China maintains the worldâs strictest controls on fentanyl substances - there is no other country that comes close.
In 2019, China took the global lead by implementing a comprehensive ban on all fentanyl substances, effectively closing the loophole that allowed evasion of regulation through minor molecular alterations. Subsequently, China has continuously strengthened its control measures, placing multiple fentanyl precursors under regulatory oversight. Every stage - from production and operation to transportation and import/export - is now under strict surveillance, with logistics delivery and port inspections becoming even more rigorous. As a result, China has achieved zero cases of fentanyl smuggling to foreign countries. Following the 2019 comprehensive control of fentanyl substances and the 2021 comprehensive control of synthetic cannabinoids, China will extend its regulatory framework to include nitazene-related substances by 2025. This establishes a comprehensive regulatory system covering multiple categories of new psychoactive substances. This model of controlling all structurally similar substances represents one of the most stringent regulatory approaches globally.
Research published in Science and the report by US Congress in February this year both confirm that Chinaâs stringent controls have significantly increased the difficulty of obtaining global drug manufacturing precursors. This has driven down the purity and potency of fentanyl in the United States, indirectly reducing overdose deaths. It also corroborates that the source of fentanyl seized by U.S. authorities has long shifted from China to Mexico. The U.S. attempt to shift blame is fundamentally an effort to divert attention from domestic conflicts and governance failures.
Itâs an internal matter, not an external one - stop deceiving yourself
Americaâs fentanyl crisis has never been a border issue, nor a problem stemming from other countries. It is a structural flaw within our own borders that has become deeply entrenched. Trumpâs failure lies in his reliance on political theater while refusing to confront the root causes.
Pharmaceutical companies aggressively promoted opioid prescription drugs for profit. With only 5% of the worldâs population, Americans consumed 80% of the global opioid supply, leading millions to become addicted - pharmaceutical companies are the âtoxic seedsâ of the fentanyl crisis. Treating addiction as a criminal issue and the weak and underfunded drug rehabilitation system left addicts with nowhere to turn - thatâs the âAchillesâ heelâ. The widening wealth gap has left marginalized communities suffocating under unemployment and poverty, while inadequate mental health services drive many to drugs as an escape- this is the fertile breeding ground for drug proliferation. Compounding this, fentanyl is easy to produce and inexpensive, enabling drug cartels to constantly develop new variants. Traditional detection methods fail to keep peace, making drug control efforts exceedingly difficult.
These deep-rooted problems are embedded within Americaâs social and political systems. Building walls, shifting blame, and partisan bickering cannot fundamentally resolve them.
The fentanyl crisis has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans. This tragedy, which affects countless families, should not be used as a tool in partisan political games, nor should it serve as an excuse for politicians to pass the buck.
If the United States remains mired in partisan strife, politicizes public health issues, and refuses to confront its fundamental problems, then the current positive trend will prove to be nothing but a flash in the pan. The fight against drugs is never a performance. It relies on concrete actions and a reverence for life instead of the empty rhetoric of politicians.

















