Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s current chief rival for the nomination, has also sponsored legislation that would allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical companies. Many of the provisions in his bill are echoed in Clinton’s new plan.

Sanders also sent Turing a letter on Monday demanding information on the company’s price hike.

“The enormous, overnight price increase for Daraprim is just the latest in a long list of skyrocketing price increases for certain critical medications,” Sanders said in a joint statement with Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

“Without fast access to this drug, used to treat a very serious parasitic infection, patients may experience organ failure, blindness or death,” Sanders and Cummings said.

Indeed, Daraprim is widely considered one of the best medications for toxoplasmosis or people whose immune systems are weakened by HIV/AIDS or cancer. The Infectious Diseases Society of America slammed Turing’s action, saying it burdens patients and creates unsustainable costs for the country’s healthcare system.

Big Pharma has come under fire in recent weeks over its unregulated control over drug prices. A recent survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that more than 70 percent of Americans feel medication prices are unreasonably high and that drug companies put their own profits above people’s medical needs.

And Shkreli does not disagree. In fact, he used it as his defense, telling CBS News, “The drug was unprofitable at the former price, so any company selling it would be losing money. And at this price it’s a reasonable profit. Not excessive at all.”

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