
RFK Jr grilled on vaccine policies and healthcare fraud in bruising House hearing
Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, faced a bruising day on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, including being forced to retract accusations against a Democratic congressman after claiming the lawmaker's vaccine stance was bought by $2m in pharmaceutical contributions.
In a hearing held by the House health subcommittee, Kennedy was met with hours of contentious questioning over budget cuts, massive healthcare fraud and accusations he lied to senators to secure his confirmation.
Kennedy launched his attack on representative Frank Pallone after the New Jersey Democrat hammered him over vaccine policy reversals. 'You've accepted $2m from pharmaceutical companies,' Kennedy said. 'Your enthusiasm for supporting the old [vaccine advisory committee] seems to be an outcome of those contributions.'
The accusation appeared to reference Pallone's shift from raising concerns about mercury in FDA-approved products in the 1990s to later supporting mainstream vaccine policy – a change Kennedy suggested was motivated by industry money rather than science.
After a point of order, the Republican chair ordered Kennedy to retract the remarks after lawmakers accused him of impugning Pallone's character. But the pharma attack was overshadowed by accusations that Kennedy lied his way into office. Representative Kim Schrier, a pediatrician, asked Kennedy: 'Did you lie to senator [Bill] Cassidy when you told him you would not fire this panel of experts?'
Two weeks ago, Kennedy axed all 17 members of the CDC's vaccine advisory committee, despite assurances to Cassidy during confirmation hearings.
'You lied to senator Cassidy. You have lied to the American people,' Schrier said. 'I lay all responsibility for every death from a vaccine-preventable illness at your feet.'
Kennedy denied making promises to Cassidy.
The hearing exposed the deepening fractures in Kennedy's relationship with Congress, even among Republicans who initially supported his confirmation. What began as a routine budget hearing devolved into accusations of dishonesty, conflicts of interest and fundamental questions about whether Kennedy can be trusted to protect public health.
In one moment, representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez pressed Kennedy about his ignorance to the Trump administration's reported investigation of UnitedHealthcare, the nation's largest health insurer, for criminal fraud in Medicare Advantage plans.
'You are not aware that the Trump Department of Justice is investigating the largest insurance company in America?' Ocasio-Cortez asked again after suggesting he couldn't confirm that it was happening.
When she said that for-profit insurers such as UnitedHealthcare defraud public programs of $80bn annually, Kennedy appeared confused about the scale: 'Did you say 80 million or billion?'
'80 with a 'B',' Ocasio-Cortez said.
For Democrats, Tuesday's performance confirmed their worst fears about a vaccine-skeptical activist now controlling the nation's health agencies. For Kennedy, it marked an escalation in his battle against what he calls a corrupt public health establishment pushing back on his radical vision.
But behind the political theater lay a fundamental reshaping of America's public health architecture. Kennedy's cuts have eliminated entire offices and centers, leaving them unstaffed and non-functional. While he defended the reductions as targeting 'duplicative procurement, human resources and administrative offices', he hinted that some fired workers might be rehired once court injunctions on the layoffs are resolved.
Kennedy recently replaced the fired vaccine advisers with eight new appointees, including known spreaders of vaccine misinformation. The move alarmed even supportive Republicans such as Cassidy, who called Monday for delaying this week's advisory meeting, warning the new panel lacks experience and harbors 'preconceived bias' against mRNA vaccines.
Kennedy has long promoted debunked links between vaccines and autism, raising fears his appointees will legitimize dangerous anti-vaccine theories.
He also explained why he was pulling Covid-19 vaccine recommendations for pregnant women, claiming 'there was no science supporting that recommendation' despite extensive research showing the vaccines' safety during pregnancy.
'We're not depriving anybody of choice,' Kennedy insisted. 'If a pregnant woman wants the Covid-19 vaccine, she can get it. No longer recommending it because there was no science supporting that recommendation.'
In another sidebar, Kennedy unveiled his vision for America's health future: every citizen wearing a smartwatch or fitness tracker within four years. The ambitious scheme, backed by what he promised would be 'one of the biggest advertising campaigns in HHS history', would see the government promoting wearables as a possible alternative to expensive medications.
'If you can achieve the same thing with an $80 wearable, it's a lot better for the American people,' Kennedy said.
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