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Senators Intensify Scrutiny of WADA Over Chinese Swimmer Doping Case

Lawmakers are pushing to expand presidential funding authority after WADA defended its contamination ruling.

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Olympic swimmer Katie McLaughlin arrives to testify before a Senate subpanel about the World Anti-Doping Agency on Tuesday.
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Overview

  • Senators from both parties accused WADA of stonewalling by refusing to appear at Tuesday’s hearing to explain its decision not to sanction 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive in 2021.
  • In January, the Biden administration withheld $3.6 million in annual dues to WADA and a bipartisan bill would allow the president to suspend future U.S. funding until governance and transparency reforms are implemented.
  • U.S. Anti-Doping Agency chief Travis Tygart told the subcommittee that failures to penalize contaminated swimmers may have impacted up to 96 medals at the 2021 and 2024 Olympic Games.
  • WADA spokesman James Fitzgerald defended the agency’s handling of the contamination claims as legally sound and said appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport would likely have failed.
  • Concerns over WADA’s independence have intensified ahead of the Los Angeles 2028 and Salt Lake City 2034 Olympics, prompting calls for an independent anti-doping governance model.