Senators Who’ve Raked In Millions From Big Pharma To Question RFK Jr. In Double Hearings AND: RFK Jr. Confirmed as HHS Secretary
RFK Jr. Confirmed as HHS Secretary
Makes Concessions to Senators on Vaccines, Research
Funding, Abortion
# 1
In a make-or-break moment to ‘make America healthy again,’ Trump’s pick to lead the crusade at HHS will be questioned Wednesday and Thursday.
President
Donald Trump’s pick to run the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
will be grilled in public hearings held by lawmakers who’ve pocketed more than
$10 million from the pharmaceutical industry.
In a
make-or-break moment for the movement to “make America healthy again,” Trump’s
nominee to lead the crusade at HHS, environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,
is scheduled to testify on Capitol Hill Wednesday and Thursday. Kennedy will
appear before the Senate Finance Committee first, and the Health, Education
Labor & Pensions Committee second.
“There are a
series of industries that actually make money from keeping us sick,”
Kennedy said in an interview with Dr. Phil last year, which
the host re-shared this week. “You would think they want us healthy but they
actually make more money if we get sicker. And of course, with the
pharmaceutical companies, if you have a chronic illness then you’re a lifetime
patient.”
Kennedy said
the diabetes drug Ozempic in particular is being relied on to induce weight loss for a nation where
more than two-thirds are overweight and 40 percent are obese. In November, the
Biden administration proposed an 11th-hour rule to cover the medication under federal insurance
programs. If confirmed as HHS secretary, Kennedy would decide whether to
approve the $35 billion handout for drug manufacturers or terminate the
proposal. Kennedy, however, has been a consistent critic of the medications
now recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP) for obese children as young as 12.
“A sick
child,” Kennedy said in his August endorsement speech of Trump, “is
the best thing for the pharmaceutical industry. When American children or
adults are sick with a chronic condition, they’re put on medication for their
entire life.”
Kennedy’s
persistent antagonism of the pharmaceutical giants led to a shock in their stocks upon his nomination to lead the
nearly $2 trillion agency in charge of regulating the drug
industry. HHS holds jurisdiction over the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), making HHS a primary recruitment ground for the
industry’s revolving door of influence, which Kennedy has pledged to eliminate.
On
Wednesday, Kennedy will face his first round of questions before lawmakers on
the Senate Finance Committee who’ve received roughly $7 million from drug
companies between 2019 and 2024, according to a Federalist analysis of industry
donations compiled by OpenSecrets. Members of the Senate Health Committee,
who will question Kennedy Thursday, have received more than $5.6 million in
contributions from the pharmaceutical industry, or nearly $4.4 million around a
similar timespan once excluding Sens. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Bill Cassidy,
R-La., and Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn, who also serve on the Finance Committee.
Sen. Thom
Tillis, R-N.C., received more contributions from the drug makers than any other
member of either party across both committees, with more than $691,000 between
2019 and 2024, according to OpenSecrets. Sen. Cassidy, a physician
who has been one of Kennedy’s most vocal critics by targeting past skepticism of vaccines, came in a close
second with nearly $673,000 from pharmaceutical interests in the same
five-year period.
Dr. Nicole
Saphier, a radiologist, Fox News contributor, and author of the book, Make America Healthy Again, told The Federalist
that Kennedy’s “well-documented skepticism towards vaccines and other health
issues” are a primary liability.
“He has
backed away on some of his rhetoric since the nomination process, saying
publicly he does not want to restrict vaccines, only ensure their safety,” she
said. But, she added, “he will have to convince physician members of the Senate
and others that this is not a ploy to garner votes, rather he should lay out a
specific plan on how he will improve the safety of vaccines and how access will
not be impacted by whatever measures he plans to implement.”
Kennedy has
also faced attacks from an organization backed by former Vice President Mike
Pence that characterized Trump’s HHS nominee as an abortion extremist. The
group, Advancing American Freedom, warned lawmakers of confirming a recent pro-abortion
Democrat to oversee one of the nation’s most powerful regulatory agencies.
“While RFK
Jr. has made certain overtures to pro-life leaders that he would be mindful of
their concerns at HHS, there is little reason for confidence at this time,” the
group said.
The
group, according to CNN, has also received a six-figure
donation from a pharma-funded foundation built on an empire of sugar substitutes and birth
control pills.
“Not
surprisingly, the group is also attacking RFK for supporting psychedelic
therapy,” said Calley Means on
X. A December poll found nearly half of U.S. adults favor Kennedy’s
plans to legalize psychedelic substances for therapeutic use, though
Republicans support the idea the least out of 10 platform items.
Republican
concerns about Kennedy’s abortion views were largely laid to rest last month
when he pledged to reinstate pro-life protections which
existed during Trump’s first term. Kennedy had previously endorsed abortion
through all nine months of pregnancy during the presidential campaign, a
position he walked
back last May once he learned women selectively “abort healthy, viable
late-term fetuses.” He did not, however, fully embrace a pro-life platform
backed by social conservatives.
“While the
Pro-Life members may oppose his Pro-Choice stance, President-elect Trump has
indicated he is against a federal abortion ban so voting against RFK Jr.
because of his Pro-Chance stance is a moot point,” said Dr. Saphier.
“Ultimately, I believe RFK Jr. will be confirmed since Republicans were handed
a mandate by the American people and while they many not be wholly satisfied
with the nominee for HHS Secretary, a vote against him by a Republican could be
politically disastrous for the Senator.”
Democrats,
on the other hand, worked to stall Kennedy’s confirmation proceedings with ethics
complaints outlined in The New York Times last week. Trump’s pick to run HHS,
the Times reported, plans to maintain a financial stake in a lawsuit
against the vaccine manufacturer Merck.
“The ethics
document said Mr. Kennedy would continue to collect fees for cases in which he
referred clients to Wisner Baum, a law firm suing Merck over Gardasil, a
vaccine that protects against the human papillomavirus, or HPV,” said the
Times.
Michael
Chamberlain, the director of the non-profit ethics watchdog Protect the
Public’s Trust, told The Federalist that Kennedy’s arrangement should not be
problematic.
“What’s sad
is that much of it appears based more in cynical speculation than factual
analysis,” Chamberlain said. “It is evident that RFK, Jr. complied with his
obligations to provide all of the relevant information, and he has worked with
ethics officials to set up structures to allow him to identify and avoid any
conflicts of interest. The real question that should be asked is: what is the
motivation behind this cynical speculation?”
https://thefederalist.com/2025/01/28/senators-whove-raked-in-millions-from-big-pharma-to-question-rfk-jr-in-double-hearings/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dc_elites_tried_to_stop_him_they_failed&utm_term=2025-02-13
#2
Concessions
to Senators on Vaccines, Research Funding, Abortion
The Kennedy
scion has been ostracized by his own family since he launched his presidential
bid and after later endorsing President Trump.
Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. has been confirmed to be the next Secretary of Health and Human
Services after a lengthy confirmation process that saw him make major
concessions to Republican senators on everything from vaccines to research
funding to government funding of abortion. His “Make America Healthy Again”
movement was seen as a critical component of President Trump’s success in
2024.
Mr. Kennedy
was confirmed on a party-line vote 52-48, with no Democrats supporting his
nomination. A steady lobbying effort by the White House helped clinch the
confirmation, including calls made by Vice President Vance to the chairman of
the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, Senator Cassidy,
who himself is a physician.
In order to
win confirmation, Mr. Kennedy had to make a number of concessions to key
Republican lawmakers, however. Senator Hawley in December said that he was
cautiously optimistic after a meeting with Mr. Kennedy that the nominee would
back Mr. Trump’s plans to end all government funding for abortions, despite Mr.
Kennedy being a lifelong supporter of abortion rights.
Just two
days before Mr. Kennedy came before the HELP Committee, Mr. Hawley told The New
York Sun that he was still undecided on whether or not to support him. Under
questioning from Mr. Hawley at the confirmation hearing, Mr. Kennedy reiterated
that he would help curb the number of abortions in America, which led the
Missouri senator to consent to the nomination.
Two other
key moderate lawmakers — Senator Collins and Senator Murkowski — both announced
just in the last 48 hours that they would support Mr. Kennedy after he promised
to help them with issues important to their states.
Ms. Collins
has been ringing alarm bells about the federal funding freeze on things like
grants from the National Institutes of Health which have been used to fund
medical research in her native state of Maine. She said in a statement on
Tuesday that Mr. Kennedy promised to help re-examine the funding freeze and get
those grants unlocked, leading her to issue a statement in support.
Ms.
Murkowski said she had concerns about Mr. Kennedy’s views on vaccine safety,
but said that she could support him after he said he would not make it
“difficult” for Americans to access vaccines if they chose to use them. She
also said that his work with indigenous groups — a population that is sizable
in Alaska — was admirable.
“I am
encouraged by the time he has spent among indigenous peoples, his commitment to
tribal sovereignty, and his promised attention to the Indian Health Service. He
has spent time in rural Alaska and understands some of the unique public health
challenges we face that require complex solutions,” Ms. Murkowski said
Wednesday. “There is much shared work ahead to achieve better public health
outcomes, and I will push Mr. Kennedy to realize these goals.”
Many saw his
nomination to be health secretary as a reward by the president after Mr.
Kennedy aided Mr. Trump’s bid for the White House last year. At the time he
dropped out, Mr. Kennedy was polling in the high single digits nationwide, and
that support came overwhelmingly from those who otherwise would have supported
Mr. Trump. Nationally, Mr. Trump only ended up winning the popular vote by less
than two points.
Mr. Kennedy
saw an interest in his campaign spike after he left the Democratic primary to
run as an independent against both President Biden and Mr. Trump. According to
a survey from
Gallup prior to his decision to leave the race and back the current president
in August, 25 percent of those who supported Mr. Kennedy were under the age of
30 — the largest share of all presidential candidates last year. Vice
President’s Harris base was only 17 percent under 30, while just 9 percent of
Mr. Trump’s supporters were under the age of 30.
Mr. Kennedy
has said that his support among those between the ages of 18 and 29 was likely
due to his decision to speak to voters directly through long-form podcast
interviews, which is how the newest generation of voters are consuming their
news.
What was
critical to Mr. Trump’s victory last year was a flood of support from
low-propensity voters who were overwhelmingly young and male — a group that was
the backbone of Mr. Kennedy’s campaign when it was going on. His support of Mr.
Trump could have helped him clench that string of victories across all seven
swing states, where the president won by just more than 200,000 votes in the
Electoral College.
Some
believed that there were at least a few Senate Democrats who might break ranks
and support Mr. Kennedy’s nomination, though that did not materialize. Senator
Sanders, who, like Mr. Kennedy has long been critical of the healthcare and
pharmaceutical lobby’s influence in the nation’s capital, announced just before
the committee vote that he would not support the health secretary
nominee.
Senator
Whitehouse — a longtime friend of Mr. Kennedy’s, having roomed with him in law
school and attended one of his weddings — similarly withheld judgment on the
nominee until the committee process. Mr. Whitehouse, like Mr. Sanders,
ultimately did not back the nominee.
https://www.nysun.com/article/hold-rfk-jr-confirmed-as-health-secretary-after-making-concessions-to-senators-on-vaccines-research-funding-and-abortion
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