U.S. Withholds $3.6 Million Payment To WADA, Loses Board Seat In Ongoing Saga

The United States has withheld its annual payment to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and subsequently lost a Board seat in an ongoing saga stemming from the Chinese doping case that came to light last year.

The U.S., specifically the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), withheld the $3.6 million payment after WADA failed to conduct an independent audit of operations, United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) CEO Travis Tygart said in a statement Wednesday.

“USADA fully supports this decision by the White House ONDCP as the only right choice to protect athletes’ rights, accountability, and fair competition,” Tygart said.

The nonpayment is the latest chapter in an ongoing battle between WADA and USADA in the aftermath of the doping scandal involving 23 Chinese swimmers testing positive for a banned substance in early 2021. Tygart and USADA have been vocal about their distrust of WADA and its handling of the case, which only came to light in April 2024, more than three years after the tests were conducted.

“Unfortunately, the current WADA leaders left the U.S. with no other option after failing to deliver on several very reasonable requests, such as an independent audit of WADA’s operations, to achieve the transparency and accountability needed to ensure WADA is fit for purpose to protect athletes,” Tygart continued.

“Since the exposure of WADA’s failed handling of the 23 Chinese swimmers’ positive tests that gave China and its athletes special treatment under the rules, many stakeholders from around the world, including athletes, governments, and National Anti-Doping Agencies, have sought answers, transparency, and accountability from WADA leadership.”

“Because WADA failed to uniformly enforce the global rules in place to protect the integrity of competition and athletes’ rights to fairness, significant reform at WADA must occur to ensure this never happens again.”

In a statement, WADA confirmed that the organization had not received the payment by the Dec. 31 deadline, meaning the U.S. cannot have a representative on the WADA Foundation Board or Executive Committee.

WADA said the U.S. owes $3.625 million, with its 2025 operating budget sitting at $57.5 million.

“Under Article 6.6 of the WADA Statutes, Public Authority representatives from a country which has not paid its dues are ineligible to sit on the Foundation Board or the Executive Committee,” WADA said. “Therefore, on 1 January of each year, any Foundation Board or Executive Committee member representing a country that has not paid its annual contribution for the previous year automatically loses their seat.”

The U.S. has been the top contributor to WADA since its inception in 2000, Tygart said, adding that the authority to withhold payments to WADA was “initially put in place under the first Trump Administration in conjunction with Congress when WADA’s ineffectiveness was exposed in the Russia state-sponsored doping scheme.”

“As a result of WADA’s failure during this sad saga that ultimately saw Russia rob hundreds of athletes from the U.S. and other countries at the highest levels of competition, Congress passed the Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, which President Trump signed into law in 2020. Also, the Trump Administration and Congress granted ONDCP the authority to withhold payment from WADA in the event that it did not act in a fair, effective, and transparent manner.”

During Donald Trump‘s first term, his Administration threatened to withhold funding to WADA due to its lack of transparency and the U.S. seeking a greater voice as the country that contributes the most money annually to the agency.

Tygart said the nonpayment will have no impact on U.S. athletes and their right to compete in international events.

“We need a strong and independent WADA and we will continue to work with all stakeholders in the US and internationally to ensure the global system delivers on the promise of clean sport to the world’s athletes,” he said.

Tygart also pointed to the U.S. hosting some major international events over the next few years, notably the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, making it a key time to plant a stake in the ground.

“Now is the time to get WADA right to ensure these competitions on U.S. soil are clean, safe, and a pageantry of fair competition in which we can all have faith and confidence.”

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Trump2024
4 hours ago

Very well written article. Great job James.

Viking Steve
9 hours ago

I good and necessary opening salvo….

Breezeway
11 hours ago

Is USADA going to open their books and be transparent?

Jeff
Reply to  Breezeway
9 hours ago

doubt it. Thats not how they work.

Aquatic Ursine
14 hours ago

I’m sure China’s extra bribes will cover that, the folk at WADA are obviously extremely committed to their noble mission so I’m sure they won’t even spare a second thought about routing that money out of the swiss bank accounts.

WADA seriously invoking their “supreme authority” while refusing audits like they’re the Pentagon 🤡

Last edited 14 hours ago by Aquatic Ursine
Awsi Dooger
14 hours ago

The United States should demand that WADA return $23 million from past contributions.

Just an arbitrary number

Jeff
Reply to  Awsi Dooger
9 hours ago

Didn’t hear too many US supporters cheer against Justin Gatlin and the other track team members that had tested positive. I just feels like ‘how dare they cheat better than us’

Dan
Reply to  Jeff
5 hours ago

Justin Gatlin was routinely booed when he returned to competition after his doping ban. You can look that up. None of us has a breakdown of the nationality of those booing, but many Americans did not support him.

That said, the most important thing about Gatlin was that he had to serve a 4 year ban after testing positive. Those 23 swimmers who tested positive didn’t even get a warning.

Jamba Juice drinker 49
14 hours ago

Good! I feel like a clean sport isn’t that hard, it’s not like doping is going to win you millions of dollars

Admin
Reply to  Jamba Juice drinker 49
14 hours ago

Clean sport is incredibly hard and doping can win you millions of dollars if you also have talent and work hard.

CookedBeans
16 hours ago

Good decisions imo, no emotionally stemmed decisions, only safe precautions/repercussions

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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