Senator Cassidy (01:55):
I think y'all have about every angle you can get of the witness, so I'm [inaudible 00:02:02]. Thank you, everybody, for being here. Bobby, I see your family behind you and I like your family except for the nephew who's a Florida Gator. We'll let that go. The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions will please come to order. Again, Senator Kennedy … I mean, Bobby Kennedy, I'm sorry. I thank you for appearing before the committee and for your willingness to serve our country, as your family has served our country. You and I have talked at length about a variety of issues impacting Americans' health. These have been candid conversations and I very much appreciate your willingness to engage. There are many things you and I agree on. We're in total agreement on the need to address ultra processed food to reduce obesity, and obesity, of course, the leading cause of chronic disease and therefore of shorter lifespans. This will be a priority in this committee and I look forward to collaborating with you if you are confirmed. But it's no secret I have some reservations about your past positions on vaccines and a couple other issues. So we know a lot about you. I'll tell you a little bit about myself. Before I entered politics or even thought about running for office, I practiced medicine for 30 years, working in public hospitals in California and Louisiana, specializing in liver disease, caring for those who otherwise would not have had a specialist. If you will, dedicating my life to saving lives. That is, being a doctor. Now, there is a moment in my career that really informs me now. In the early 2000s, I was loading a patient onto an air ambulance, an 18-year-old young woman, to go to get a liver transplant from acute liver failure due to Hepatitis B.
(03:56)
Barely an adult, her entire life ahead of her, all the hopes and dreams she might want, the children, the grandchildren, the future generations, wiped away if she did not get to the LSU hospital in Shreveport for an emergency transplant. Now, the transplant, an invasive, in 2000, quarter of a million dollar surgery that had a 5% to 10% mortality rate, but even if she survived, would leave her with a liver transplant and hospital bills every year of $50,000. And as she took off, it was the worst day of my medical career because I thought $50 of vaccines could have prevented this all. That was an inflection point in my career. Since then, I've tried to do everything I can to make sure I never have to speak to another parent about their child dying due to a vaccine-preventable disease.
(04:54)
So I worked with community and business leaders to form a public-private partnership in the capital region of Louisiana. We vaccinated 36,000 children for Hepatitis B, and since the CDC and the ACIP have recommended universal vaccination for children, the number of acute Hepatitis B cases in our country has declined by almost 90%. So as a physician who's been involved in immunization programs, I've seen the benefits of vaccinations. I know they save lives, I know they're crucial part of keeping our nation healthy. Now, Bobby, I've learned you got a tremendous following. My phone blows up with people who really follow you and there are many who trust you more than they trust their own physician. So the question I need to have answered is what will you do with that trust?
(05:53)
Whether it is justified or not, and you may not want this to be the case, but I have constituents who partly credit you for their decision to not vaccinate their child. Now, that's a real conversation and I'm hearing from them and they want you confirmed. Now, you're going to tell us this week as you did … I think you'll tell us today as you did in finance committee yesterday that you're pro-vaccine. So what will you tell the American mother? Will you tell her to vaccinate her child or to not? Or to have a conversation with her doctor? But for many that will be permission to not vaccinate their child. We know that to be the case.
(06:40)
So your past of undermining confidence in vaccines with unfounded or misleading arguments concerns me. Can I trust that that is now in the past? Can data and information change your opinion or will you only look for data supporting a predetermined conclusion? This is imperative. You'll have the responsibility to restore trust in our public health institutions in this position you have. Now, let's turn a little political. I want President Trump to be successful. It's important for our country, any action you take as HHS secretary will shape his legacy and we both want that legacy to be positive. So thank you for coming before the committee, for being willing to serve, and I look forward to today's conversation.
(07:36)
With that, I yield to my ranking member, Senator Sanders.
Senator Sanders (07:42):
Thank you, Senator Cassidy, Chairman, and Mr. Kennedy, thanks for being with us. I'm going to discuss later the issue of vaccines which Senator Cassidy raised and is of concern I think to all of us. But before I go there, I wanted to congratulate you in a sense for the phrase Make America Healthy Again. I think that is a cry that all of us … a goal that all of us share because as you have indicated, we're a very unhealthy society. We are the richest country in the history of the world and yet we rank far below every other major country in terms of our life expectancy. That's outrageous. To me equally outrageous is if you're working class in this country, you're going to live six or seven years shorter lives than if you are rich.
(08:34)
In America today, 68,000 people die every year because they can't get to a doctor. They can't afford to get to a doctor. You pointed out yesterday the outrageous cost of healthcare in America, two or three times more than other industrialized countries are paying. Unbelievably, in this country, hundreds of thousands of people deal with cancer struggling for their lives. You know what happens to them? They go bankrupt. They deplete their lives' savings. In other words, when we talk about making America healthy, you got to talk about a broken, corrupt healthcare system.
(09:18)
Your uncle, President Kennedy, your father, Bobby Kennedy, great senator from New York, your uncle sat right now where Senator Cassidy is sitting, chairman of this committee. All of them did what I think is the right thing. They said healthcare is a human right. They looked all over the world. You saw every other major country guaranteeing healthcare to all people, whether they're rich or poor, young or old. So I'm not quite sure how we can move to making America healthy again unless we have the guts to take on the insurance companies and the drug companies and guarantee healthcare to all people. I'll be asking you a question about that.
(09:59)
Lowering the cost of prescription drugs. How do you make America healthy again if one out of four people in this country cannot afford the price of prescription drugs, which is far higher in America any other country on earth? Under President Biden, we made some progress and this committee played an active role in having Medicare begin, for the first time, negotiating the price of drugs that we are paying. I'm going to ask you whether or not you will demand that President Trump follow what we accomplished here.
(10:34)
We are the only major country on earth not to guarantee paid family and medical leave. Mr. Kennedy, there are women today who are having babies that they're going to go back to work in a week or two because they have no guaranteed paid family and medical leave. How do you have a healthy country when women are forced to go back to work, when women and men get fired because they stay home taking care of their sick kids? That's not making America healthy again. I would go a little bit beyond the jurisdiction of health and human services, but I think it's important. If you are working 50 or 60 hours a week making 13, 14 bucks an hour, which is what millions of Americans are, can you be healthy? Will you join those of us who think that in the United States, wealthiest country on earth, people work 40 hours a week, they should not live in poverty? Got to raise the minimum wage to a living wage.
(11:38)
Lastly, and we discussed this very briefly, President Trump believes that climate change is a hoax. I happen to believe and most Americans believe and virtually the entire scientific community believes that it is existential threat to this planet. I don't know how you're going to make America healthy again or keep the world healthy when you have massive heatwaves and droughts and floods and extreme weather disturbances. Louisiana had them, Vermont had them. That's not keeping America healthy and not … that's not within the jurisdiction of HHS, but I surely hope that you will, if you are confirmed, demand that President Trump change his position and work with those of us who are trying to transform our energy system and in fact keep America healthy by addressing the crisis of climate change. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Cassidy (12:29):
Thank you, Senator Sanders. Now I'd like to welcome our nominee, Mr. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Mr. Kennedy has a long career as an attorney and advocate for various health and environmental concerns. He has championed a range of issues like healthy foods and efforts to fight chronic disease while calling for greater transparency and accountability in our public health infrastructure. Mr. Kennedy has an important opportunity to reform the department and to restore trust in our federal health agencies. I look forward to hearing more about his policy priorities and his plans to advance President Trump's agenda to make America healthy again. I thank you for joining us today and I'll now turn over to Mr. Kennedy to introduce himself.
(13:09)
Is your microphone on? Is your microphone on?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (13:14):
Oh, sorry. Thank you, Chairman Cassidy, Thank you, Senator Sanders. Ranking member Senator Sanders and other members of this distinguished committee, Cheryl and I were heartbroken last night to learn the tragic accident that took so many of our fellow Americans, including our service members. We are in an apartment where we were able to see the rescue operations from our window. Senator Marshall, please know that I will continue … there you are. Continue to pray for you, as I texted you last night, for those who were lost who called your state home, as well as Senators Kaine and also Brooks. We appreciate the first responders and local officials who are working so hard. May God continue to be with us all and all who are impacted, and those who continue to help with the recovery.
(14:23)
I'm humbled to be sitting here today as President Trump's nominee to oversee the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. I want to thank President Trump for entrusting me to deliver on his promise to make America healthy again. I'm grateful to have my family here once more with me. I want to introduce my wife Cheryl, my daughter Kick, my son Bobby, my daughter-in-law Amaryllis, and my nephew Jackson Hines. I want to thank them as well as the many members of my large extended family for the love they have so generously shared. I want to particularly thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the time you've spent with me and the times we've talked in person by phone. I greatly admire your passion for public health and your commitment to science, and this committee is blessed to have a medical doctor at the helm and two other medical doctors, Dr. Marshall and Dr. Rand, on the committee.
(15:32)
I explained yesterday to the finance committee that my journey into the issue of health began with my career as an environmental lawyer, working with hunters and fishermen and mothers in the communities and small towns along the Hudson River. I learned that human health and environmental health are intertwined and inseparable. The same chemicals that kill fish also sicken human beings. Today, Americans' overall health is in grievous condition. Over 70% of adults and a third of children are overweight or obese. Diabetes is 10 times more prevalent than in 1960. Cancer among young people is rising by 1% or 2% per year. Autoimmune diseases, neurodevelopmental disorders, asthma, Alzheimer's, ADHD, depression, addiction and a host of other physical and mental health conditions are all on the rise.
(16:31)
The United States has worse health than any other developed nation, yet we spend more on healthcare, sometimes double, sometimes triple, as other comparable nations. Last year we spent 4.8 trillion, not counting the indirect costs from missed work. That's almost a fifth of GDP. It is tantamount to a 20% tax on the entire economy. No wonder America has trouble competing with countries that pay a third of what we do for their healthcare and yet have a healthier workforce.
(17:07)
But I don't want to make this too much about money. It is the human tragedy that moves us to care. President Trump has promised to resurrect America's global strength and our leadership and restore the American dream, and he understands that we can't be a strong nation unless we're first a healthy people. A healthy person has a thousand dreams. A sick person has only one. Today, over half our countrymen and women are chronically ill and have only one dream. When I met with President Trump last summer, I discovered that he has more than just a concern for this tragic situation, but genuine care. President Trump has committed to restoring the American dream and 77 million Americans delivered a mandate to do just that, due in part to his embrace and elevation of the Make America Healthy Again movement. That movement, led largely by MAHA moms from every state, many of whom have traveled to be here yesterday and today, senators, this is one of the most powerful and transcendent movements I've ever seen. The nation is ready for change and recognizes that this is a unique inflection moment.
(18:31)
I've promised President Trump that if confirmed I will do everything in my power to put the health of America back on track, and I've been greatly heartened to discover a deep level of care among members of this committee, both Democrats and Republicans. I came away from our conversations hopeful that we can put aside our divisions for the sake of a healthy America. For a long time, the nation has been locked in a divisive healthcare debate about who pays. Well, when healthcare costs reach 20% of GDP, there are no good options, only bad ones. Shifting the burden around between government and industry and corporations is like changing deck chairs on the Titanic. Our country will sink beneath a sea of desperation and debt if we don't change course and ask the fundamental question, why are healthcare costs so high in the first place?
(19:33)
The obvious answer to that question is chronic disease. The CDC says over 90% of healthcare spending goes toward managing chronic disease, which hits lower income Americans the hardest. The President's pledge is not to make some Americans healthy again, but to make all Americans healthy again. There is no single culprit for chronic disease. Much as I've criticized certain industries and agencies, President Trump and I know that most of the scientists and experts genuinely care about American health. Therefore, we will bring together all stakeholders in pursuit of this unifying goal.
(20:17)
Before I conclude, I want to make sure this committee is clear about a few things. News reports and many in the hearing yesterday have claimed that I'm anti-vaccine and anti-industry. Well, I'm neither. I'm pro-safety. I'm pro-good science. I worked for 40 years to raise awareness about mercury and other toxics in fish and nobody called me anti-fish. All my kids are vaccinated. I believe vaccines have saved millions of lives and play a critical role in healthcare. Nor am I the enemy of food producers. American farms are the bedrock of our culture and our national security. I was a 4H kid and I spent my summers on ranches. I want to work with our farmers and food producers to remove burdensome regulations and unleash American ingenuity. MAHA simply cannot succeed if we do not have the partnership of America's farmers.
(21:18)
In my advocacy, I've often disturbed the status quo by asking uncomfortable questions, and I'm not going to apologize for that. We have massive health problems in our country that we must face honestly. The first thing I've done every morning for the past 20 years is to pray to God that he would put me in a position where I can end the chronic disease epidemic and protect our children. That's why I'm so grateful to President Trump for the opportunity to sit here before you today and seek your support and your partnership in this endeavor.
(21:59)
I'll conclude with the promise to you, Mr. Chairman, members of this committee, to the president, and most of all to the tens of millions of parents across America, especially the moms who have propelled this issue to the center stage, should I be so privileged as to be confirmed, we will make sure our tax dollars support healthy foods. We will scrutinize the chemical additives to our food supply. We'll remove the financial conflicts of interest from the agencies. We'll create an honest, unbiased, science-driven HHS accountable to the president, to the Congress, and to the American people. We'll reverse the chronic disease epidemic and put the nation back on the road to good health. Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (22:47):
Thank you, Mr. Kennedy. I'll start. And for everyone's information, yesterday Finance went long. This is not the Star Chamber. This is where I think most people can get their questions out in five minutes. So I'll let it go a little bit over five, but out of deference to our witness who's already testified for three hours, I'll be a little tight. That said, at the end, taking the ranking member and the chairman's privilege, the two of us will have a chance to ask a little bit more and that's what you get for being a chair. So that said, let's begin.
(23:24)
Bobby, if I may, because you said I could, you had once described yourself as pro-vaccine to me. Now, the context of what I'm about to ask is that there's multiple studies establishing the safety of measles and Hepatitis B vaccine and specifically that they are not a cause of autism. In this position, and you have previously said yes, but if you are approved to this position, will you reassure mothers unequivocally and without qualification that the measles and Hepatitis B vaccines do not cause autism?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (24:04):
Senator, I am not going into the agency with any-
Senator Cassidy (24:08):
Well, that's kind of a yes or no question because the data is there and that's kind of a yes or no. And I don't mean to cut you off, but that really is a yes or no.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (24:19):
If the data is there, I will absolutely do that.
Senator Cassidy (24:23):
Now, there is … the data, just because I used to … I used to do Hepatitis B, as I've said. I know the data's there.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (24:30):
Well, then I will be the first person … if you show me data, I will be the first person to assure the American people that they need to take those vaccines.
Senator Cassidy (24:42):
Now, what concerns me is that you've cast doubt on some of these vaccines recently. I mean, like last few years. But the data, and I can quote some of it, the data has been there for a long time. I've been out of the game. I've been in Congress for 16 years and this data was in large measure generated before I came to Congress. So my concern is that if you are making those claims and being so influential … I mean, your bully pulpit is incredible. With that responsibility, that you never acquainted yourself with anything that might contradict that what you were previously saying. So let me ask once more. If the data is brought to you and these studies that have been out there for quite some time and have been peer-reviewed and it shows that these two vaccines are not associated with autism, will you ask, "No, I need even more", or will you say, "No, I see this, it stood the test of time and I unequivocally and without qualification say that this does not cause autism"?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (25:44):
Not only will I do that, but I will apologize for any statements that misled people otherwise.
Senator Cassidy (25:50):
Thank you. Next-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (25:52):
I just want to pledge to you and I will never stick on a point if somebody shows me data that says I'm wrong. I know that's an interpretation people have, but it's absolutely wrong. I am science-driven and evidence-driven.
Senator Cassidy (26:08):
I think the concern is is how persuadable people are. But let me go on because I have limited time. I'm going to hold myself to the same five minutes. Yesterday, Senator Bennett in Finance asked you if you had once previously made statements that Lyme disease was created as a military bio-weapon, and you said you may have said that once. Do you still believe that Lyme disease was created as a military bio-weapon?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (26:30):
I've never believed that, Senator. What I said is that we should always follow the evidence. There were three books suggesting that. I have not read them through. What I've said is we should always follow evidence no matter what it says. So I never have said that definitively Lyme disease was created in a bio lab.
Senator Cassidy (26:51):
Okay, next, again, this will be kind of a yes or no. Do you commit that you'll revise any CDC recommendations only based on peer review, consensus-based, widely accepted science? In other words, not personal beliefs or the beliefs of any single person that you or your department may identify?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (27:13):
Absolutely, Senator. I am not going to go into HHS and impose my preordained opinions on anybody at HHS. I'm going to empower the scientists at HHS to do their job and make sure that we have good science that's evidence-based, that's replicable, where the raw data is published-
Senator Cassidy (27:37):
I'm almost out of time so let me get to another question.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (27:39):
All right.
Senator Cassidy (27:40):
Do you promise that FDA will not deprioritize or delay review and/or approval of new vaccines and that vaccine review standards will not change from historical norms?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (27:51):
We will have the best vaccine standards with safety studies and I will … if the panel will recommend-
Senator Cassidy (27:57):
That's a little bit of a different answer than the question I asked because what is the best could be in the eyes of the beholder. So let me read again. Promise that the FDA will not deprioritize or delay review and/or approval of new vaccines and that vaccine review standards will not change from historical norms.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (28:16):
Yes.
Senator Cassidy (28:17):
Great. With that, I will set a good example and I yield my time to my ranking member.
Senator Sanders (28:25):
Thank you, Chairman Cassidy, and I'm going to do what I very rarely do is actually follow up on a question from Senator Cassidy. There have been, as I understand it, dozens of studies done all over the world that make it very clear that vaccines do not cause autism. Now, you just said, if I heard correctly, well, if the evidence is there. The evidence is there. That's it. Vaccines do not cause autism. Do you agree with that?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (29:00):
As I said, I'm not going to go into HHS with any pre-ordained-
Senator Sanders (29:04):
I asked you a simple question, Bobby. Studies all over the world say it does not. What do you think?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (29:10):
Senator, if you show me those studies, I will absolutely … as I promised to Chairman Cassidy, I will apologize-
Senator Sanders (29:17):
That is a very troubling response because the studies are there. Your job was to have looked at those studies as an applicant for this job. All right. Let me ask you another question, this one about COVID. Scientists with the Yale School of Public Health and University of Maryland have estimated that the COVID vaccine saved three million lives and prevented 18 million hospitalizations. President Trump, someone who I do not often agree with, has said that the COVID vaccine was "one of the greatest miracles of the ages". That's Donald Trump. But Bobby, you had a very different perspective. At a time when thousands of Americans were dying from COVID, every week in May of 2021, you petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to revoke the emergency use of COVID vaccines. So my question to you is, were the scientists who told us that the CO vaccine was imperative and President Trump who told us that it was this great thing, were they right or were you right when you told people that they should not take COVID shots?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (30:32):
Senator, I filed that lawsuit after CDC recommended the vaccine for six-year-old children without any evidence that it would benefit them and without testing on six-year-old children. That was my reason for filing that lawsuit.
Senator Sanders (30:49):
Was the COVID vaccine successful in saving millions of lives?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (30:53):
I don't know. We don't have a good surveillance system. Unfortunately.
Senator Sanders (30:57):
We don't know?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (30:58):
I don't think anybody can say that. If you show me science that shows that-
Senator Sanders (31:03):
But Bobby, you say if I show you, you're applying for the job. I mean, clearly you should know this. And that is the scientific community has established that, the COVID vaccine saved millions of lives, and you're casting doubt. That is really problematic. All right. Let me ask you another question on another subject. My Republican colleagues and President Trump are moving toward making massive cuts into Medicaid in order to provide tax breaks for the wealthiest people in this country. As I'm sure you know, Medicaid provides health insurance to tens of millions of children, provides the funding for two out of every three seniors in nursing homes. It provides 43% of the revenue for community health centers, something I feel very strongly about, and it is so important
Senator Sanders (32:00):
… for millions of people. If confirmed in terms of making America healthy again, will you stand up to the White House and say, "No, we cannot throw millions of children off of healthcare, millions of elderly people out of nursing homes. We cannot cut Medicaid to give tax breaks to billionaires."
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (32:21):
President Trump has a made no indication to me that he intends to throw millions of people out a nursing home or deprive people of their healthcare, Senator. If a healthcare system that's broken, it's not working, you've been working on it your entire career. As Americans get less and less healthier, as premiums rose-
Senator Sanders (32:41):
Bobby, I believe the healthcare system is broken. We agree on that-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (32:45):
He has asked me to fix it, so [inaudible 00:32:48] American people.
Senator Sanders (32:48):
But my colleagues here, certainly in the House of Representatives are prepared to make massive cuts in Medicaid. Now, I happen to believe in a Medicare for all system that guarantees healthcare at all people. Not what we're talking about. But in fact, there is serious discussion of massive cuts to Medicaid which will have devastating harm on children, people in nursing homes. All I am asking you, if that proposal goes through, will you say, "Hey, you're not keeping America healthy by throwing children off of healthcare"?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (33:18):
Senator, I haven't seen any of the congressional proposals. I can only tell you what President Trump has told me, which is that he wants me to make Medicaid, Medicare and Obamacare better.
Senator Sanders (33:31):
Well, if you haven't seen those proposals, I suggest you go to any newspaper, they're there. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Cassidy (33:37):
Senator Paul.
Senator Paul (33:39):
I think the discussion over vaccines is so oversimplified and dumbed down that we never really get to real truths, and it's why people up here are so separated from real people at home. So we talk about hepatitis B, it's a terrible disease. It could lead to liver failure as the chairman said. But the reason you have distrust from people at home and why they don't believe anything you say they don't believe government at all is you're telling my kids to take a hepatitis B vaccine when he's one day old. You get it through drug use and sexually transmitted… That's how you get hepatitis. But you're telling me my kid has to take it at one day old. That's not science. And so every person with a bit of common sense, even people who don't resist vaccines. I vaccinated all my kids. I believe vaccines are one of the modern miracles beyond all pale.
(34:27)
The Speckled Monster is a great book about the introduction of the smallpox vaccine in 1720 into our country. All miracles. But I'm not a one size fits all. It's not all or nothing. I chose to wait on my hepatitis B vaccine and we did it when they went to school. Does that make me an awful person? Does that make me an anti-vaxxer? Because I questioned the government dictate of whether I do it… And I'm not speaking for anybody else. I'm only speaking for myself. But for goodness sakes, let's have an honest debate about these things. The COVID vaccine. If you ask me my opinion, there were reporters run up and down the aisle and they say, "You still anti-vaccine?" No, I'm pro-vaccine. But on the COVID vaccine and on the COVID illness, there was a thousandfold or more difference between the elderly and children. If you don't acknowledge that, you're committing malpractices, you're showing your ignorance.
(35:16)
If you say a six-month-old must be mandated to get it, the science is not there. So all this blather about, "The science says this and the science says that." No, it doesn't. The science actually shows that no healthy child in America died from COVID. Look it up. No healthy child died from COVID. And so the thing is that it's a thousandfold greater. So if you ask me my advice as a physician, if you were 65 or older or overweight and some other conditions, I would've said, "Hell yes, I'd take the COVID vaccine." The risks of the disease were real and much greater than the vaccine. But if you ask me, "Should my healthy six-month-old get it?" See, these are the nuances you're unwilling to talk about because there's such a belief in submission. "Submit to the government, do what you're told." There is no discussion.
(36:01)
There ought to be a debate. You're not going to let him have the debate because you're just going to criticize and say, "It is this and admit to it or we're not going to appoint you." But it's more complicated than that. And this is why people distrust government, because you're unwilling to have these conversations. And go home, ask your Democrat young mothers, your Republican young mothers, if they're vaccinating their kid for hepatitis B and they're like, "Well, do I have to do it on day one? It's this precious little baby." Is there a science to say you shouldn't do it? Probably not, but it's my kid. There isn't clear-cut science saying not to, but on autism, there's no good science of anything to show what causes autism. We don't know. It's a profound disease. I know many moms here and dads who have kids with autism.
(36:44)
I know them personally. I've met their kids. But the thing is they saw their kids developing completely normal, maybe speaking 100 words go to no words at about 15 months of age. Now, there isn't proof, there isn't proof that the vaccines cause it. That's true. There isn't proof that it caused it, but we don't know what causes it yet, so shouldn't we be at least open-minded? We take 72 vaccines. Could it be? I don't know, but we shouldn't just close the door and say, "We're no longer because we believe so much in submission, we're not going to have an open mind to study these things." And so it's this crazy notion. Schizophrenia, I would put in the same notion. You have a kid who's completely normal to 18 or 19 and their brain goes haywire. How does that happen?
(37:26)
It's the most bizarre disease. Shouldn't we be open? Could it be our food? It might be vaccines, it might be our food, but autism is more common. I don't know about the schizophrenia statistics, but autism is more common. Shouldn't we want to be open-minded? Instead, we're so close-minded and we're so consensus-driven that, "The science says this." Well, science doesn't say anything. Science is a dispute, and 10 years from now, we could all be wrong. We were told in the beginning, 20 years ago, they did this enormous study and they said, "Everybody over 50 should take an aspirin." I thought, "Well, that's a pretty good idea. It makes sense." But you know what? 20 years later they measured it and they found if you had no heart disease and you were taking aspirin, your chance of dying from a brain bleed or from a stomach bleed were greater than the risk of heart disease.
(38:10)
If you have heart disease, they still say take an aspirin. If you don't, they've changed their mind 20 years later. But would you have all said I was crazy and I should no longer be in public discourse if I had said 20 years ago, "I don't feel like taking an aspirin. I ride my bike all the time. I'm afraid I might hit my head." But that's what a country's about. It's what dissent is about. So just ask you to look at the larger picture and give the guy a break who says, "I just want to follow the science where it leads without presupposition." I think really what we have up here is presupposition. You've already concluded, "It's absolute that autism isn't caused by it." We don't know what causes autism, so we should be more humble in what we say. Sorry, I didn't get a question.
Senator Cassidy (38:54):
For the record. For the record, if a child is born to a hepatitis B mother, that child may have a 95% chance of becoming a chronic carrier. But if the child-
Senator Paul (39:03):
And we vaccinate those people and nobody's against that-
Senator Cassidy (39:05):
But if the child-
Senator Paul (39:06):
That's a very small percentage, a red herring.
Senator Cassidy (39:08):
Let me finish.
Senator Paul (39:09):
That is not what we're talking about. 99.9% of kids don't have a hepatitis B mom. And could they wait a while? Could they get vaccinated three months or a year? Yes.
Senator Cassidy (39:18):
So again, for the record, if the mother's hepatitis B status is known, then that can be delayed. The problem is oftentimes, or at least a significant percentage of the time, the mother's status is not known. If she's hepatitis B positive, a vaccine on day one of life prevents chronic hepatitis B 95% of the time. So it really depends upon the knowledge of the mother's hepatitis B status. And when they used to do just okay, we know the mother status or not, there is mothers that snuck through. Their status was unknown. We can blame the OBs, but… Yeah, Marshall. But for the record, there is an absolute rationale for that. But you are right, if the mother status is definitively known, then it can be delayed. So now Senator Murray.
Senator Murray (40:11):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. HHS has really broadened critical responsibilities to protect and preserve healthcare and social services from women's health to child care, to biomedical research, that's just a few. In light of last night's tragedy, I do want to express my thoughts and prayers, but it is, I think a painful reminder to all of us that we need competent people running our federal agencies to respond when a crisis strikes. Mr. Kennedy, let me start by talking about vaccines. I think we all agree that cancer is a particularly nefarious chronic disease, and the American Cancer Society reported earlier this month that women under 50 are experiencing a dramatic increase in the incidence of that disease. Fortunately, there is clear data showing that the HPV vaccine has saved lives and cut cervical cancer rates dramatically. You have called the HPV vaccine, "Dangerous and defective." And said it actually increases the risk of cervical cancer. Do you stand by those statements, yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (41:21):
The HPV vaccine, I brought litigation, I represented-
Senator Murray (41:34):
Yes or no.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (41:34):
I represented-
Senator Murray (41:34):
Stand by your statements.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (41:34):
Let me answer.
Senator Murray (41:35):
I'm trying to… Yes or no. It's a simple yes or no. Stand by your previous statements.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (41:38):
I litigated on that issue. I represented hundreds of young girls who felt that they were injured by the vaccine. That trial is happening right now in Los Angeles.
Senator Murray (41:51):
Well, let me ask you-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (41:52):
Those questions will be answered by a jury in that trial.
Senator Murray (41:56):
You said that no loving parents would allow their daughter to receive that vaccine. If confirmed as HHS secretary, would you recommend that parents get their children vaccinated against-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (42:06):
I recommend that children follow the CDC schedule, and I will support the CDC schedule when I get in there if I'm fortunate enough to be confirmed.
Senator Murray (42:18):
Would you recommend the parents get their children vaccinated against the measles? Yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (42:22):
Against measles? Yes.
Senator Murray (42:26):
Well, just to remind everybody that parents look to our health leaders for advice on these decisions. You would be a health leader, and for the record, I would like to put into the record his previous statements on these vaccines. I do want to ask you a question about character. I still believe character matters and I want to let you respond to this. You were accused of sexual harassment and assault by Eliza Cooney who was first hired as a part-time babysitter by your family. When you were confronted about this accusation, you said you were, "Not a church boy." And that you, "Have so many skeletons in my closet." You then texted Ms. Cooney an apology and indicated you had no memory of what she described. Mr. Kennedy, I'm asking you to respond to those accusations seriously in front of this committee. Did you make sexual advances towards Ms. Cooney without her consent?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (43:18):
No, I did not. And that the story has been debunked.
Senator Murray (43:20):
But why did you apologize to her then?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (43:22):
I apologized for something else.
Senator Murray (43:26):
Well, that's not my understanding. Let me just ask you-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (43:30):
All you have to read is the text which she published. It's not for that.
Senator Murray (43:35):
That is not how I've read it. Are there any other instances where you have made sexual advances towards an individual without their consent? Just yes or no.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (43:42):
No.
Senator Murray (43:43):
No. Mr. Kennedy, you said that you're going to say to NIH scientists, "God bless you all. Thank you for your public service. We're going to give infectious disease a break for eight years."
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (43:57):
Excuse me?
Senator Murray (43:58):
You just said, thank you for your service to our federal employees. You want to give infectious disease a break. That's a quote. Will you support the development and a distribution of vaccines for the avian flu, yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (44:12):
Will I… For the avian flu? Yes.
Senator Murray (44:18):
My time's almost up, but having read a lot and listened a lot, I just want to remind all my colleagues that by voting to confirm Mr. Kennedy, we would be telling our constituents he's worth listening to. That alone could get people killed before he even lifts a finger because he does not even need the levers of power to influence people. As we saw in Samoa, all he needs is a megaphone. To affirm his views by voting to confirm him as our highest health official, we should not miss words about what that would mean. When babies die from whooping cough because parents weren't sure if the vaccine was safe, we will have to look them in the eye. When measles sweeps through school, then hospitals, nursing wards, will this be worth it? There are political realities, we all get that, but there's also right and wrong, fact and fiction, and there's also people staying healthy or dying pointlessly from diseases we can prevent because they thought Congress took its job vetting our healthcare secretary seriously. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Cassidy (45:20):
We're going to now go out of order. We're going to go to Senator Marshall. He would like to be able to view the press conference regarding the tragedy on the plane from Wichita. Senator Marshall.
Senator Marshall (45:31):
Well thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you Mr. Kennedy for your kind words this morning, for your caring texts last night. And I'm grateful for all my colleagues, most everybody reaching out to us. And certainly it's a tough day for Kansans and many others who lost loved ones, and we will look forward meeting with the President later today and those loved ones, and just want everyone back home to know that we're wrapping our arms around them, that we're mourning with them and we'll get through this together. So thank you. Mr. Kennedy, take a second and just describe why fighting chronic disease is so important to you. Who are we fighting for? What is your role as HHS secretary and is there anything that's a bigger priority to you than this as you go into this role?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (46:23):
Thank you, Senator. When I was a 10-year-old boy, my uncle was in the White House. The chronic disease among American children was 2%. Today it's 66%. The cost of chronic disease to our country when my uncle was president was zero. There were not even treatments for chronic disease at that time. Today, the cost is $4.45 trillion. It's bankrupting our country. 77% of American kids can't qualify for military service. 38% of teens according to NIH's last report, which was three weeks ago, 38% are diabetic or pre-diabetic. When my uncle was president, the typical pediatrician would [inaudible 00:47:15] one or two cases of diabetes in his lifetime, juvenile diabetes. Today, it's more than a third of the kids who walk through his door, or her door is diabetic or pre-diabetic. Autism rates have gone from one in 1500 to one in 10,000 depending on what study you look at. In my generation as a 70-year-old man today, in our children, it's one in 34. The explosion… I had 11 siblings, I had dozens of first cousins-
Senator Marshall (47:48):
Mr. Kennedy, I'm sorry. So what's your role as HHS secretary to fight that disease?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (47:56):
There's never been an HHS secretary who came in to do this. It was all the typical partisan debate about how we allocate the cost, whether insurers pay it or whether hospitals, providers or families pay it. And the costs continue to rise. All the things we're debating on, our kids are getting sicker and sicker.
Senator Marshall (48:20):
Yeah, just to quote you from yesterday, it's like we're moving the chairs on the Titanic and-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (48:26):
And the ship is sinking and nobody's paying attention to it. And yesterday I got question after question from the Democrats about measles. In 1963, the year before the measles vaccine was introduced, 500 American kids died from measles. Almost all of them extremely poor and malnourished. We have 252 million Americans who are suffering from chronic disease and none of them mentioned diabetes, they didn't mention heart disease, they didn't mention cancers yesterday. We need to refocus. If we're going to save our country, this is existential, our country's not going to be destroyed because we get the marginal tax rate wrong. It is going to be destroyed if we get this issue wrong. And I am in a unique position to be able to stop this epidemic.
Senator Marshall (49:25):
Mr. Kennedy, I want to just contribute as one of the three physicians on here, and even as I listen to my friends across the aisle, my conclusion is that we have to guard the physician-patient relationship and give those parents of these kids the information. All three of us are going to disagree on exactly who should and shouldn't get a particular vaccine. We all recognize the incredible successes of different vaccines as well, but we have to give the American public the best information, non-biased information. And I'd love to get you to respond to that, but I have an important question for folks back home, and this will be my last question. I've never seen a person whose words written and spoken have been so misattributed, exaggerated, sensationalized and taken out of context. Will you just speak to my farmers and ranchers back home and tell me about where do they fit in this role of MAHA and how we're going to work with them and just your compassion towards these farmers and ranchers?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (50:26):
Yeah, MAHA will not succeed without the cooperation and partnership of agricultural producers, of farmers and ranchers across this country. I was a 4H kid, I grew up working on ranches, and I've worked for years representing farmers in various forms of litigation. Thomas Jefferson said that American democracy is rooted in tens of thousands of independent freeholds owned by farmers. We are losing farmers today and we can't afford to lose a single farmer. And on my watch, I do not want to lose a single farmer. We have to offer farmers an off-ramp from chemically intensive agriculture, which they don't want to do, which even the chemical industry is ready to change, so that they can grow crops that they can sell in Europe, they can grow crops. Senator Hawley told me during our meeting that four out of his five of his brother-in-laws have Parkinson's. There's illness all over the farm community and it's undoubtedly related to the intensity of chemical pesticides.
Senator Cassidy (51:36):
Mr. Kennedy-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (51:37):
We need to reduce that, but I'm not going to do anything to coerce a farmer. President Trump was the best president in modern American history for the American farmer. The first one to see farm prices go up. He has instructed me to take care of the farmers and make sure they're full partners.
Senator Marshall (51:55):
God bless you. Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (51:57):
Senator Baldwin.
Senator Baldwin (51:58):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, I've been listening to the back and forth and questions, and when people have tried to pin you down, you have said-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (52:08):
Can you speak up, Senator Baldwin?
Senator Baldwin (52:10):
Yes. I've been listening to the back and forth, the questions, and when people tried to pin you down on a point you said, "Show me the data." Or, "Bring me the studies." And I want to suggest that that data is out there and those studies are out there, and if you're going to review all the studies and the data, you're going to be doing that, if confirmed, for your first year of being secretary. When we talked, we were talking a bit about vaccines at the end of our meeting, and you said really to me that there's no post-approval safety monitoring, and that led me to believe that you're not aware of the significant and ongoing safety monitoring that occurs after years of rigorous studies showing vaccines to be safe and effective. And so I want to give you the opportunity to set the record straight here. Are you aware of the measures in place throughout Health and Human Services to ensure vaccine safety after approval, yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:08):
I'm aware of the VAERS system, which CDC admits it captures fewer than 1% of vaccine injuries.
Senator Baldwin (53:15):
So you are aware of the CDC monitoring-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:16):
I'm also aware-
Senator Baldwin (53:18):
… are you aware of the FDA post-approval monitoring?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:23):
I'm aware of only two systems.
Senator Baldwin (53:25):
Are you aware of the Vaccine Safety Datalink?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:28):
Oh yeah, I'm very aware of that.
Senator Baldwin (53:30):
Are you aware of the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:33):
I'm aware of the Vaccine Safety Datalink that CDC keeps under lockbox and will not let independent scientists look at it.
Senator Baldwin (53:40):
Are you aware of the Clinical Immunization Safety Assessment Project?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:44):
As I said-
Senator Baldwin (53:46):
Are you aware of V-safe?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (53:48):
I'm aware that they're broken, and I can explain to you how each one of those is broken, if you're interested. What I want to do is make sure we have gold standard science. We get the conflicts off the panels so that people… This Congress-
Senator Baldwin (54:04):
What I listed right now are just some of the guardrails that are in place to ensure that life-saving vaccines are safe and effective. And this is after numerous clinical trials, rigorous studies and review by an independent panel of experts that show vaccines are safe and effective, which is available to all the public. If you want to take a second look at the science like you have said, well, it's here, it's available, and it's conclusive. And saying anything else is undermining vaccines. To a different issue.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (54:40):
I'm by the way, repeating what Congress found issue in the 2003 investigation.
Senator Baldwin (54:45):
Mr. Kennedy, I want to move to what I hope it will be pretty simple stuff. In general for a drug to be considered safe, would you say that 97, 98% of people taking that drug and having no complications is generally safe?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:00):
It would completely depend on what the drug is. If it's a drug given to a healthy population, that would not be an acceptable-
Senator Baldwin (55:08):
Again, this is as high a level as it gets. Would you say that when 99 out of 100 people experience minimal or no complications, that that drug is safe?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:18):
It depends what the risk is from the disease. It depends what the benefit from the drug is. If you're dying of cancer, you will take a drug with that kind of risk profile.
Senator Baldwin (55:29):
And if we were to talking about peer-reviewed-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:32):
If you're a healthy individual with zero-
Senator Baldwin (55:34):
I'm talking about mifepristone, but if we were to talk about peer-reviewed, replicable studies of a medication, would you say that you needed 10 trusted studies to get the same conclusion?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:47):
It depends what the-
Senator Baldwin (55:48):
20 trusted studies?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:49):
It depends what the-
Senator Baldwin (55:51):
What's your number?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (55:53):
It completely depends on the kind of study you're talking about. Randomized studies or observational studies?
Senator Baldwin (55:58):
Is it safe to assume that 100 studies that are replicable and peer-reviewed is enough?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (56:04):
Well, it could be one study if it was a powerful enough study.
Senator Baldwin (56:08):
The most widely used medication abortion drug, mifepristone has been FDA approved for nearly 25 years. More than 100 studies have confirmed that 99% of patients who took the abortion pill had no complications. So with all of that, I can only conclude that you would commit to keep this science-backed and proven medication on the market and accessible for women. Is that correct?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (56:36):
I'm going to… With mifepristone, President Trump has not chosen a policy, and I will implement his policy.
Senator Baldwin (56:48):
So regardless of the studies, regardless of the data, regardless of the science, you've been talking about, "Show me the data, show me the studies."
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (56:58):
Well, if you… Senator-
Senator Baldwin (56:59):
[inaudible 00:56:59] would have that policy, regardless of what the science says?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (57:03):
Senator, the devil is in the details. If you're telling me 99% of women did okay, but 1% died, I would say that is not a beneficial risk profile.
Senator Baldwin (57:14):
That's not what the studies show.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (57:15):
I know, but you're not showing me. I need those details from this study before. I can't buy a pig in a poke. Show me what the study says.
Senator Cassidy (57:23):
Let's move on. Next, it would be Senator Mullen.
Speaker 1 (57:30):
Thank you, Mr. Kennedy for being here. We have fortunately been able to form quite a friendship over the last year, and I appreciate the in-depth conversations we've had. And I just want to point out, I don't understand why my colleagues all of a sudden say, "We can't question science." It absolutely blows my mind that all of a sudden it's such shame that Bobby's sitting up here and he's questioning science. I guarantee you, if he was sitting here and he was going to be the Secretary of HHS underneath the former President Biden, which I enjoy saying former president, I would bet you that you guys would have his back 100% and enjoy the fact that he's questioning science, and would probably support his positions 100%. But because he's now on the Republican side, you guys have went way off the rail and, "How dare he question science?"
(58:20)
My God, if we didn't question science, where would we be today? We've always questioned science. Science is always evolving, ever changing. "Have a glass of wine a day. It's healthy for you." "Don't have a glass of wine a day." "Have a piece of chocolate a day. It's healthy for you." "Dark chocolate is healthy for you." "Take an aspirin a day." As Senator Rand Paul pulled out. Where would we be today if we didn't ever question science? But I will say there's an issue that I have as a father of six that when my kids come out from getting their vaccines, they look like a freaking pin cushion. 72 vaccinations? I think there's a reason we should be questioning this. When you start looking at the rise of autism, why wouldn't we be looking at everything? Who wouldn't want to look at everything? Give me anybody in this room that doesn't know somebody that you're personally connected to, that one of their children doesn't suffer from some severity of autism. Give me one. And you guys are all saying that Bobby can't question it?
(59:22)
I don't get it, guys. I don't understand your point other than the fact you just oppose him because he supports a president that you guys don't like now. I applaud him for going into the situation and saying, "Let's question something." The definition of insanity is doing the same thing expecting different results. Is it not true that you're supposed to question science? Is anybody going to question the fact that that's not true? Bobby, share the numbers again with me about autism. Where were they at when you as a child to where they're at today as my kids are children?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (59:56):
There weren't a lot of studies when I was a kid, but the best studies and really the only studies out there, there are two studies. One shows a rate of about one in 10,000, another about one in 1500, and there are other estimates in between. Today it is one in every 36 kids according to CDC. I want to say one other thing. Relevant to what a point you just made. In 1963, my uncle awarded… John F. Kennedy, the highest civilian honor to Francis Kelsey. Francis Kelsey was a young scientist at NIH who came in and objected to the panel having approved thalidomide for American children.
(01:00:48)
All the scientists of that day, they were doing it in Europe. All the scientists of that day and the scientific panels that worked for the agency approved, green lighted thalidomide. She stood up and screamed and fought and risked her job and risked her reputation and she blocked it in our country. Three years later, everybody recognized that she was a hero and a savior of our children because we were not getting the kind of terrible diabolical deformities as they were experiencing in Europe. My uncle gave her the highest civilian honor because she questioned science and was courageous enough to stand up and say, " I don't care what happens to me. This cannot happen."
Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
And the irony is that she was a Democrat at that time and she questioned science, but now all of a sudden because you're working for Republicans, you're not allowed to question science. Let's go back to this and let's just use the number of one in 10,000 at your age. Now we're a little bit different in age. I'm not going to say how old you are, but you look great for your age. I will say that one in 36, if that's not a pandemic than what is? One in 36, and it used to be one in 10,000 have autism now? Can any of you guys with a straight face say that we shouldn't look at every aspect to what we're putting in our kids, be it from the food to the vaccines?
(01:02:16)
One in 36, that scares the living daylights out of me. With six kids, I could have 36 grandkids. I'm just doing the math. I'm the youngest of seven. My family seems to be pretty active in that area. So I'm not necessarily trying to be funny, but I'm being very serious, guys. We should support the fact that Bobby's questioning this. He's not saying he's against it. He's saying he's going to question it and let the studies follow where they will, and God bless you for doing that. Thank you.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:02:49):
Thank you, Senator.
Senator Cassidy (01:02:53):
Senator King.
Senator King (01:02:55):
Thank you Mr. Chair, and congratulations on your nomination, Mr. Kennedy. I enjoyed our conversation. Thank you for starting off today acknowledging the pain felt by people in this region from this horrible air tragedy last night. Senator Marshall and Senator Moran, a lot of folks from Kansas, a lot of folks in Virginia, DC, Maryland, but also when that passenger list comes out and when the three soldiers names are revealed, every office here is going to have some connection to them, because you have your staffs who live here, and we dread seeing that list of names. I drove to the airport at 6:30 this morning and went across the bridge over the Potomac and saw the recovery operation underway in daylight hours. And I thought about the last big aviation disaster in Richmond when on 9/11 a plane slammed into the Pentagon, and Virginia got hurt very bad that day and so did the nation. Just a couple of months ago, you posted this on your X account.
Senator Kaine (01:04:00):
… On 9/11, it's hard to tell what is conspiracy theory, and what isn't. I'd like to introduce that, for the record, Mr. Chair.
Senator Cassidy (01:04:09):
Without objection.
Senator Kaine (01:04:13):
We take that kind of stuff pretty personally. Virginians know what happened on 9/11. We don't need folks giving oxygen to conspiracy theories about 9/11.
(01:04:26)
Now, one thing I noticed about this post is, it was in July of 2024. It was 23 years after 9/11. You had a lot going on in your life. You were running for {resident then.
(01:04:37)
What made you decide, in the midst of everything going on in this country, in this world, in July of 2024, in your own candidacy for president, that now was the time to say, "It's hard to tell what is conspiracy, and what isn't, about 9/11?" What was so important about making this point in July of 2024?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:04:58):
Senator, the dramatic drop in trust in our government, and this is, particularly, one of the templates of that, is what happened at CDC.
Senator Kaine (01:05:06):
Yeah, no, no. I want to move aside from that, because you say, you go on to say, "I won't take sides as President. I won't take sides on 9/11." Wow. "I won't take sides on 9/11."
(01:05:27)
Let me ask you this. As a general matter, do you find it hard to tell what is a conspiracy theory, and what isn't? Is that kind of a general deficit that you find in your own analytical abilities?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:05:44):
My father told me, when I was 13 years old, he said, "People in authority lie, and that the job of a citizen, in every democracy"-
Senator Kaine (01:05:56):
You're an official. You're an authority.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:05:57):
… "is to maintain a fear, or a skepticism"-
Senator Kaine (01:05:59):
Okay, okay, I get it.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:06:00):
"Of government authority."
Senator Kaine (01:06:01):
And you're an authority. And you're an authority, but you wouldn't take sides on 9/11, and you're admitting-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:06:06):
I haven't, I get it. Senator-
Senator Kaine (01:06:08):
"I have a hard time telling what is a conspiracy theory, and what isn't."
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:06:12):
Senator, I haven't investigated it. The things that I investigate, I take sides on. People are allowed to hold that opinion.
Senator Kaine (01:06:19):
They're allowed to-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:06:20):
I'm not going to tell them they're crazy for holding that opinion. I'm going to say, "What is your evidence"? And if I hear the evidence, I'm going to say, "That doesn't make any sense."
Senator Kaine (01:06:27):
So you won't take sides on 9/11? Wow. Senator Murray asked you some questions about Gardasil, and this is a vaccine that's manufactured in Virginia. There's other, there's other HPV vaccines.
(01:06:40)
I'm going to enter into the record a whole series of studies from many, many nations that talk about the dramatic positive effect of Gardasil. Could I introduce those into the record, Mr. Chair?
Senator Cassidy (01:06:51):
Without objection.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:06:51):
And those studies are on trial-
Senator Kaine (01:06:52):
Wait, let me ask a question. Let me ask a question. These are studies from Scotland, Sweden, the UK, Australia, the United States, multiple studies.
(01:07:03)
And then, I'm going to introduce to the record, I guess it's a blog post of yours. "The verdict is now inescapable. Gardasil is killing girls." And I'd like to introduce that into the record, as well
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:07:15):
Without objection.
Senator Kaine (01:07:16):
Do you have a pretty significant financial interest in litigation against Gardasil? You have received contingency fees and payments for referring people to lawyers suing the manufacturer, and in your ethics vetting-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:07:29):
I've never received any money from any Gardasil, or any other vaccine lawsuit.
Senator Kaine (01:07:33):
Wait, wait. Let me read a quote. This is your words. In your ethics vetting for this nomination, you said, "Pursuant to the referral agreement, I'm entitled to receive 10% of fees awarded in contingency cases referred to the firm."
(01:07:48)
How can folks who need to have confidence in federal vaccine programs trust you to be independent and science-based, when you stand to gain significant funding, if lawsuits against vaccine manufacturers are successful?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:08:03):
I have given away all of my rights to any fees in that lawsuit.
Senator Kaine (01:08:09):
I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (01:08:11):
Next is Senator Scott.
Senator Scott (01:08:13):
Thank you Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, good to see you again. Thank you for being here before the committee.
(01:08:18)
One of the beauties of our country is we have foundational documents that point us in the right direction. I think it's the compass that shows us due north, true north.
(01:08:25)
The Declaration of Independence mentions life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness as unalienable rights. You and I had a serious conversation about the importance of life, and I'm a pro-life Christian, as you know.
(01:08:37)
And you said, you assured me, that your deputies were going to be pro-life. Is that still the case?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:08:43):
I will implement President Trump's policies, I serve at his pleasure, but I share President Trump's view that every abortion is a tragedy. I share-
Senator Scott (01:08:52):
My question was, are you having deputies within HHS, that will be pro-life?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:08:58):
As I said, I can tell you exactly what I'm going to do, so there's no mistake. I'm going to implement President Trump's policies. President Trump has told me he wants to end late term abortion.
Senator Scott (01:09:10):
Are you hiring people who are pro-life at HHS?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:09:14):
Yes, I am.
Senator Scott (01:09:15):
Thank you. During the first Trump administration, HHS began investing in policies to support individuals living with sickle cell anemia. This has continued.
(01:09:25)
A career staff person has dedicated time to coordinate sickle cell disease-related activities across HHS, and other government agencies. Are you commit to continuing to have an individual serve in this coordinated role for sickle cell?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:09:39):
Yes, and I think I've worked on sickle cell for many, many years. I told you, I have many friends who have sickle cell, several of them. I've seen the suffering that they endure. One out of every 365 Blacks in our country has sickle cell.
(01:09:56)
There are now promising gene therapies. They're very, very expensive, but it's something that NIH should be enthusiastically supporting, that kind of research.
Senator Scott (01:10:07):
Well, you answered my second question, so that's great, which was, today, you noticed the FDA gene therapies are really a breakthrough, evolutions in science, that are really one-time cures. So you support the continuation of the research that makes that more available?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:10:24):
Absolutely, Senator.
Senator Scott (01:10:24):
Thank you. That's great news. This past fall, due to one facility making the majority of our IV drugs in the US, it was devastated by Hurricane Helene. Hospitals and healthcare facilities across the country faced IV shortages.
(01:10:41)
Nephron Pharmaceuticals, in Columbia, South Carolina, tried to shore up IV support in South Carolina hospitals, by creating the Palmetto Line in its facility, to help make IVs for hospitals across the state. We must do more proactively, to address the shortages, and the shortage risks, as well as to provide and promote the production of medical products here in the US. If confirmed, how will you prioritize efforts to prevent and reduce drug shortages, including for essential medicines?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:11:11):
Including?
Senator Scott (01:11:12):
Essential medicines?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:11:14):
I mean, President Trump has told me it's his priority to bring essential medicine manufacturing back to this country. It's a national security threat.
(01:11:25)
So much of it has been exported abroad, and particularly to China, and it's a priority for him. So it's a priority for me, as well. Very good.
Senator Scott (01:11:35):
Will you commit to fostering productive public-private partnerships that can provide the government with key information on pharmaceutical supply chains, help direct shortages, and improve the long-term security and resiliency of the US drug supply?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:11:48):
Absolutely, Senator.
Senator Scott (01:11:49):
Thank you very much. And one of the things that we study, I had two opportunities to question you. Once, yesterday at the Finance Committee, I opted, as opposed to seeing you twice, just to see you one time, and spend my time doing some other things with that time. But I think it's important for us to recognize that we are in a critical place as a nation.
(01:12:09)
We're so dependent on other countries for the essentials, from healthcare and beyond, and we ought to work on a strategy of resilience across this nation, in all of the essential areas, that we need to become less dependent on the rest of the world, and more dependent on ourselves.
(01:12:28)
And I hope that as your term at the HHS, you'll spend a lot of time thinking through, and all the layers and complexity that is under HHS, how we become more and more resilient as a nation.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:12:43):
That's absolutely critical for our national security, and for our economy. President Trump is doing that through HHS, but also, more importantly, through the Commerce Department, and meeting directly with pharmaceutical industry leaders, to figure out what kind of incentives that they need, to bring manufacturing home.
Senator Scott (01:13:05):
Perfect. Thank you.
(01:13:06)
Mr. Chairman, I yield back my eight seconds.
Senator Cassidy (01:13:09):
And then, we'll go to Senator Murphy.
Senator Murphy (01:13:12):
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, thank you for joining us here today.
(01:13:16)
Listen, credibility matters so much, when you lead the most important health agency in the world. The Secretary of HHS has got to be trusted, that he's telling the truth, that he cares about science, has no political agenda. Mr. Kennedy, I want to go back to some of your testimony yesterday, before the Finance Committee, when you either feigned ignorance, about some very clear statements that you have made in the past, or you outright denied saying things about the vaccine program that you have undoubtedly said.
(01:13:52)
And so, with a day's hindsight, I want to give you another chance to be honest about the things that you have said. Senator Warnock asked you yesterday if you had compared America's vaccine program to the Catholic Church's pedophilia scandal.
(01:14:11)
You said you never said that. Now, I'm not asking you to explain what you said.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:14:14):
I didn't say I'd never said that.
Senator Murphy (01:14:14):
You didn't say it, you didn't say that? Senator Warnock-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:14:18):
I did not say that I hadn't said that, Senator. I said, the other question, he asked-
Senator Murphy (01:14:19):
You're doub … You're doubling, that's fine.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:14:19):
… me about Nazi death camps.
Senator Murphy (01:14:23):
That's fine. You're doubling down on that. You said, Senator Warnock also asked you, if you compared America's vaccine campaign to the Nazi death camps and the Holocaust. Again, you said yesterday you didn't say that.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:14:36):
I did not say that.
Senator Murphy (01:14:37):
You did not say that. Senator Bennett asked you yesterday, if you had made an allegation that AIDS is a different disease in Africa, than it is in America. On that one, you said you didn't recall.
(01:14:51)
Having had a day to think about it, do you recall saying that AIDS is a different disease in Africa than it is in the United States?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:15:01):
I looked up that passage in my book, and found that indeed, the diagnostics for AIDS are very different in Africa than in the United States, that the list of symptoms is almost completely different.
Senator Murphy (01:15:18):
So let me just, I'll submit this for the record, but having denied the first two statements, let me just read what you said.
(01:15:28)
You said, in 2013, " Is it hyperbole to say that the people who run our vaccine programs should be in jail? They should be in jail. To me, this is like Nazi death camps. Look at what it does to the families who participate in the vaccine program. I can't tell why somebody would do something like that. I can't tell you why ordinary Germans participated in the Holocaust. I can't tell you what was going on in their minds."
(01:15:58)
With respect to the pedophilia scandal, you said, "The pedophilia scandal in the Catholic Church is a perfect metaphor for what's happening in the United States. The vaccine program, it's the same reason we had a pedophilia scandal in the Catholic Church. It's because people were able to convince themselves that the institution of the church was more important, than these little boys and girls who were being raped."
(01:16:23)
I don't disagree with Senator Mullen. I don't want an HHS Secretary that's not going to question science. I think it's important to question science, but you're not questioning science. You've made up your mind.
(01:16:34)
You have spent your entire career undermining America's vaccine program. You make these purposeful comparisons to those that are administering the vaccine program to the Nazi executioners, to the people who covered up the Catholic Church's pedophilia scandal, because you have made a decision that there is a comparison, that there is evil in the vaccine program, as there was evil in the pedophilia scandal, and the Nazi death camps.
(01:17:08)
You aren't exploring science, you have made up your mind, you've spent your entire career trying to undermine these programs. The reason that these statements, these incredibly aggressive, over the top statements matter to us is, because it just isn't believable, that when you become secretary, you are all of a sudden going to be consistent with science.
(01:17:32)
People who have spent their career saying these kinds of things, running the kinds of campaigns that you have run, don't all of a sudden change their stripes. And so, Mr. Chairman, I will submit these statements into the record.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:17:45):
Can I respond to that, Senator?
Senator Cassidy (01:17:46):
Without objection.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:17:50):
My statement about the Catholic Church is almost identical. The findings of the Government Oversight Investigation Committee had investigated the CDC's vaccine program in 2003. Senator Burton was chairman of that committee, and he said that certain individuals in that program had written off a generation of kids, because of "misplaced institutional loyalty to the CDC, and because of entanglements with the drug company," so-
Senator Murphy (01:18:23):
But, but you, [inaudible 01:18:24]-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:18:24):
Let finish, let me finish what I'm saying.
Senator Murphy (01:18:25):
You equate, you equate-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:18:25):
You made some grave accusations-
Senator Murphy (01:18:27):
… pedophilia, to the administration of vaccines?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:18:31):
No, it wasn't pedophilia.
Senator Murphy (01:18:33):
It was a perfect metaphor.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:18:35):
Well, if you have one in 36 kids who is neurological injuries, and if that is linked, that's something that we should study.
Senator Murphy (01:18:45):
Is it a perfect metaphor? Is it a perfect metaphor?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:18:46):
It's not a perfect metaphor, but there's no metaphor that's perfect. But I am pro-vaccine. I am going to support the vaccine program. I want kids to be healthy, and I'm coming in here to get rid of the conflicts of interest within the agency, make sure that we have gold standard, evidence-based science and if you show me where I'm wrong in this, show me a single statement I've made about science that is erroneous.
Senator Cassidy (01:19:11):
Thank you. Senator Hawley?
Senator Hawley (01:19:15):
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, welcome. I enjoyed our conversation last month, in our office.
(01:19:21)
And thank you for remembering, as you did again today, my uncles who we talked about, Boris and Lauren and Jean, who all have recently passed away from Parkinson's, grew up in a farm family. That was kind of you to remember them, so thank you for that.
(01:19:33)
Let me start by asking you a question about children, and the safety of children. President Biden's administration, his HHS issued a rule, a rule, so it's binding, requiring that every doctor in America, including pediatricians who receive any kind of federal funding, so that's anybody who takes ACA funding, excuse me, anybody who takes CHIP funding, this is almost every health provider in America, requiring them to conduct gender transition and gender, so-called, affirming procedures.
(01:20:02)
So that means hormones, that means puberty blockers, that means surgeries, in some cases. They impose that rule on doctors across the country. This has been litigated, and it has been actually stopped by a couple of courts, who found that it was way outside of HHS's jurisdiction.
(01:20:16)
My question to you is, will you rescind this rule that imposes this radical policy, and talk about being anti-science, this radical policy, on just about every pediatrician in the United States of America?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:20:31):
Yes, I will. And by the way, that rule is anti-science. The most thorough meta-review on gender-affirming care has come out in the Cass Report, which reports really catastrophic impacts on children and that is science. It's a meta-review of view of all the existing scientific studies.
(01:20:55)
But even more, just from a common sense, if you're a patient, do you really want somebody performing surgery on you, who is morally opposed to that surgery? It doesn't make any sense.
(01:21:09)
We need to embrace diversity in this country. Our people who believe that's important, I respect them, we should hear them out, we should debate. We should have a congenial conversation.
(01:21:22)
But there are also people who believe that it is an atrocity. And they need to be listened to, too. And we need to embrace diversity, and make room for diversity in this country, and not force people to do things that are against their conscience.
Senator Hawley (01:21:37):
And let me just point out that, on this rule, what's particularly pernicious about it is, we're talking about gender transition surgeries, gender transition care on minor children. This rule purported to preempt all state law, so in states like mine, and many others, where the voters have said, "We don't want gender transition procedures performed on minors," the Biden administration attempted to use federal money and force pediatricians to do it anyway, so I'm glad to hear you say you'll rescind that rule. I think that's terrific for the safety of children.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:22:07):
And Senator, I would add that we don't let children drink. We don't let them drive an automobile, because they have bad judgment. They're flooded with hormones, their brains are still in formation, their sexuality is still in formation.
(01:22:21)
Allow them to make judgments about that are going to have life changing, forever implications for the rest of their life at that age is unconscionable, particularly in light of the Cass Report.
Senator Hawley (01:22:36):
I'm glad to hear you say that. Let ask you a question about NIH research, if I may. I know this is something that you care a lot. About under the first Trump Presidency-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:22:43):
I do want to add that people who have gender differences should be respected, they should be loved, but loving them does not … Sometimes, love means saying no to people.
Senator Hawley (01:22:57):
Let me, on NIH, under the first Trump presidency, HHS stopped new NIH research that involved human fetal tissue from elective abortions. Now, you were asked about this tangentially yesterday by Senator Cantwell, and I want to get your quote right.
(01:23:12)
You said to her correctly, you said, "Stem cell research today can be done on umbilical cords, and don't need any fetal tissue," which is correct. My question to you is, will you reinstate President Trump's policy, that ensures that no federal research and no federal tax dollars is conducted on fetal tissue taken from elective abortions?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:23:29):
Yes.
Senator Hawley (01:23:30):
Fantastic. Let me ask you just about Title X. You were asked about this yesterday, too, and I think I understand your answer. I just want to be sure I've got it crystal clear.
(01:23:38)
Title X, which prohibits the funding of the use of federal taxpayer funding for abortions, or to flow to entities like Planned Parenthood, that perform abortions, or refer people to abortions.
(01:23:50)
You were asked yesterday, if you would support President Trump's rule, that says no Title X funding, for those who perform abortions or refer people to abortions, I think your answer was, yes, you would reinstate that rule. I just want to be sure I'm right about that.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:24:00):
Yes.
Senator Hawley (01:24:01):
Fantastic. Last point that I have for you, on Mifepristone, the chemical abortion drug. You said yesterday that you would study its safety. I think that's good. I want to make an additional point here, just about how the Biden administration change the rules on Mifepristone, that I hope that you'll take into consideration, because you pointed out, I'm almost done, Mr. Chairman, that we need to honor the wishes of voters and states, and their right to set life policy.
(01:24:26)
I just point out that the Biden administration's rule on Mifeprestone, which they did after the Dobbs decision, means that in any state, including ones like mine, where voters or state legislators say, "We don't want abortion performed after a certain point," if the Biden administration rule on chemical abortion stands, and you can mail in these abortion drugs, without a doctor visit or referral, that means no state ban, no state decision, no voter decision is going to matter. We're going to have a one size fits all policy set here in Washington. I hope you'll take that into consideration.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:24:56):
I'll implement President Trump's policies.
Senator Cassidy (01:25:00):
Senator Hassan?
Senator Hassan (01:25:01):
Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, and Ranking member Sanders. Good morning, Mr. Kennedy. Look, I want to just take a moment, because like a few of us on this dais, I sit on Finance, as well as HELP. And one of the things that was most disturbing to me about yesterday's hearing was the suggestion, from some of my friends on the other side of the dais, that our intense questioning and concerns about Mr. Kennedy were driven by partisanship.
(01:25:34)
I have voted for five of President Trump's nominees to date in the last couple of weeks. One of them, the new Secretary of Transportation, was on the scene last night at DCA. Like all of us, I take really seriously our obligation for advice and consent.
(01:25:53)
And I am concerned, as Senator Mullen expressed his concern, about the need for science to help us move forward on critical, critical issues. Now, some of you are new to this committee and new to the Senate, so you may not know that I am the proud mother of a 36-year-old young man with severe cerebral palsy.
(01:26:15)
And a day does not go by, when I don't think about, "What did I do when I was pregnant with him, that might have caused the hydrocephalus, that has so impacted his life?" So please, do not suggest, that anybody in this body of either political party doesn't want to know what the cause of autism is.
(01:26:38)
Do you know how many friends I have, with children who have autism? The problem with this witness's response on the autism cause, and the relationship to vaccines, is because he's re-litigating and churning settled science, so we can't go forward, and find out what the cause of autism is, and treat these kids, and help these families.
(01:27:10)
Mr. Kennedy, that first autism study rocked my world. And like every mother, I worried about whether, in fact, the vaccine had done something to my son. And you know what? It was a tiny study of about 12 kids, and over time, the scientific community studied, and studied, and studied, and found that it was wrong.
(01:27:37)
And the Journal retracted the study. Because sometimes, science is wrong. We make progress. We build on the work, and we become more successful. And when you continue to sow doubt about settled science, it makes it impossible for us to move forward.
(01:27:59)
So that's what the problem is here. It's the re-litigating and rehashing, and continuing to sow doubt, so we can't move forward. And it freezes us in place.
(01:28:12)
Now let me move on to my other concerns from yesterday's hearing. During yesterday's hearing, you really showed a lack of knowledge about Medicare and Medicaid. So what is Medicare Part A?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:28:28):
Medicare Part A pays mainly for primary care or physicians, and then, Medicare-
Senator Hassan (01:28:38):
No. So it is about, Medicare Part A is seniors' coverage for inpatient hospital care. What's Medicare Part B?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:28:45):
For physicians and doctors. Medicare Care Part D is for-
Senator Hassan (01:28:50):
That is coverage for outpatient care and home health. So what is Medicare Part C?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:28:55):
Medicare Part C is a program, where it's the full menu of all the services, A, B, C and D for Medicare.,
Senator Hassan (01:29:05):
It is Medicare Advantage, which, it's the private insurance option for seniors on Medicare.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:10):
Exactly.
Senator Hassan (01:29:10):
So Mr. Kennedy, you want us to confirm you to be in charge of Medicare, but it appears that you don't know the basics of this program. So let's turn to Medicaid.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:21):
I just explained the basics.
Senator Hassan (01:29:22):
No, I had to correct you on several things.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:24):
Oh, you just added information, Senator-
Senator Hassan (01:29:26):
Yesterday, you said-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:26):
… you didn't correct me. I didn't get it wrong.
Senator Hassan (01:29:29):
Mr. Kennedy. My time is limited, and I hope the Chair will give me a couple of more minutes.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:33):
Is this a question, Senator?
Senator Hassan (01:29:34):
Yes, Medicaid-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:34):
All right. Because you're giving me very little time to answer one.
Senator Hassan (01:29:38):
Let's turn to Medicaid. Let's turn to Medicaid. You said yesterday to Senator Cassidy, "Medicaid is fully paid for by the federal government, and it's not fee for service."
(01:29:49)
That statement is false. Do you now understand that that statement is false? Yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:29:55):
That Medicaid is paid for by the federal government, I believe I said no.
Senator Hassan (01:29:58):
You said it is fully paid for. Medicaid, in fact, sir is a federal-state partnership-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:30:04):
Well, no. The states, the state has a partnership, that's right.
Senator Hassan (01:30:05):
Right. So you were wrong yesterday. So you're acknowledging that that statement was false, right?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:30:09):
I misstated something.
Senator Hassan (01:30:10):
All right, good. So yesterday, when you were questioned about Medicaid, you repeatedly dodged questions, by saying you want to make it better. Republicans are circulating a proposal that would end Medicaid expansion in some states, including in New Hampshire.
(01:30:24)
So I will continue, submit this for the record, but it is important to me to understand whether you believe that taking Medicaid away from 60,000 people in New Hampshire would make Medicaid better. And would it make New Hampshire healthy again?
(01:30:40)
I'll submit that for the record. Thank you. Mr. Chair.
Senator Cassidy (01:30:42):
Senator Tuberville.
Senator Tuberville (01:30:45):
Thank you. Thank you Mr. Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Kennedy, for being here.
(01:30:48)
Being a few months older than me, I'm going to be respectful of your elders.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:30:53):
Not by much.
Senator Tuberville (01:30:54):
Yeah, not by much, that's right. But thank you. Look at this room. We hadn't had a full room in here since I've been in here four years, on any hearing.
(01:31:04)
Thank you for bringing the light to what this is all about. It's about health in our country. There might have been a half a dozen people in, in the last Health and Human Services nominee. Nobody was interested. A lawyer who worked from home in California, didn't do a damn thing, in terms of what we needed, when COVID was full steam. So thank you. Thank you for getting our young people involved. My two boys, 28 and 30, a year or so ago, they were going to vote for you for President of the United States. You know why? Because you're trying to save their group of people from the chemicals, and the things that we have in our food. They're fired up about it. And you brought light to that, and thank God you've done that.
(01:31:53)
You brought importance to what we're doing. You know I coached for 40 years. In the last four or five years I coached, I'd never seen like the run on drugs our young people are being given by doctors across this country.
(01:32:05)
We have a attention deficit problem in this country. Attention deficit. When you and I are growing up, our parents didn't use a drug, they used a belt, and whipped our butt, and told to sit down.
(01:32:18)
Nowadays, we give them Adderall and Ritalin. They're like candy across college campuses and high school campuses. Mr. Kennedy, what are we going to do about that?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:32:29):
Today, 15% of American kids are on Adderall, and there's clearly a major problem with over-prescription, not just with our children, but with our entire population. We have 4.2% of the world's population, and we take 50% of the pharmaceutical drugs.
(01:32:52)
There's a recent study by Peter Gøtzsche, who is one of the founders of the Cochrane Collaboration, that showed that prescription drugs are now the third-largest cause of death in our country, after cardiac arrest and cancer.
(01:33:05)
We're not getting healthier. Americans are getting less and less healthy. 70% of pharmaceutical profits globally come from our country, which has 4.2% of the world's population.
(01:33:19)
We're the only country that allows full-scale pharmaceutical ads on TV. And we're all being told, "You can make yourself, you can eat anything you want, you can smoke anything you want, you can do anything you want, and there'll be a drug to fix you in the end." And it is not a good formula. And our kids are getting sicker and sicker. They're not getting better.
(01:33:41)
Nobody here, all the people here who are defending this current system and defending these pharmaceutical industry profits, many of whom are taking huge amounts of money on the pharmaceutical industry, millions of dollars, for many of these Senators.
(01:33:58)
And none of that, this is not making our country healthier, it's making us sicker. We need to get rid of these conflicts. We need good science, and we need good leadership, is able to stand up to these big industries, and not bent over for them.
Senator Tuberville (01:34:16):
Thank you. And you brought to light the vaccines over the last couple of years. I've had my first granddaughter here in a couple of weeks, and my son and his wife have done their research about vaccines, and she's not going to be a pin cushion. We're not going to allow that to happen. But you brought that up.
(01:34:36)
But, as you and I talked about vaccines, "Coach, let's empower scientists to do their job. Let's go by what they do. Let's don't just do something for the pharmaceutical companies." So I appreciate you doing that.
(01:34:47)
One other thing is, you and I talked about Red Dye Number Three. And just happened, you and I talked about that, and a few days later in this room, we had the FDA director, and I asked him, "Why do we use Red Dye Three in our cosmetics?"
(01:35:01)
Or, "We don't use in cosmetics, we use in our food, but we don't use it in cosmetics, because it causes cancer. What in the heck's going on?" Well, a few weeks later, because of your insistence, we dropped it.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:35:13):
Thank you for that, Senator.
Senator Tuberville (01:35:15):
So tell me about dyes and things that you're concerned about, because I get more talk about that, than anything.
Senator Cassidy (01:35:19):
We have 10,000 ingredients in our food in this country, because FDA employs a standard called the GRAS standard, and looks at any new chemical is innocent until proven guilty.
(01:35:32)
In Europe, they have 400 ingredients in their foods, Kellogg's makes Fruit Loops for the United States alone. It is loaded with red dye, blue dye, yellow dye, and many, many other ingredients. They make the same product for Canada, it's all vegetable dyes, and for Europe.
(01:35:49)
If you eat a McDonald's French fry in this country, it has 11 ingredients. With the same product in Europe, it has three. We are allowing these companies,
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:36:00):
Because their influence over this body, over our regulatory agencies to mass poison American children, and that's wrong, it needs to end, and I believe I'm the one person who's able to end it.
Senator Cassidy (01:36:15):
Thank you. Senator Kim.
Senator Kim (01:36:19):
Thank you, chairman. Mr. Kennedy, good to see you. I wanted to just start by asking you if you support medically assisted treatment to help people get off of Opioid addiction?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:36:29):
Yes, I do.
Senator Kim (01:36:30):
Do you think it's safe? And would you consider it to be the gold standard of the approach?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:36:35):
The Cochrane Collaboration, which is the most prestigious scientific research organization has said that, as found in studies, the gold standard is 12 step programs. You need an entire retino, entire menu of treatments because many addicts will not respond immediately, at least, to 12 step programs, and for many of them, Suboxone and other and even methadone are critical interventions that save lives, that get addicts off the street and they should be available as a treatment option. I wouldn't describe them as gold standard, but I would describe them as medically necessary.
Senator Kim (01:37:21):
Well, this is something. Look, I know we all take this very seriously in terms of the plight of Opioid addiction in our country, and that's something that I hope we can recognize we need to lift up more and more. NIH has said over and over again, not enough people are doing it, and in fact, an NIH published study does call it the gold standard of treatment for Opioid use disorder. You're on a mission against and fighting against chronic disease, you talk a lot about obesity. I wanted to get your thoughts if you support Wegovy, Ozempic, other similar types of GLP-I drugs to fight obesity?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:37:55):
The GLP drugs, the class of drugs are miracle drugs, but I do not think they should be the first frontline intervention for six-year-old kids for whom currently that is the standard of practice now. If every American qualifies for GLP by being overweight, 74% of our population will ask for them, and the federal government was paying for it, it would cost over a trillion dollars a year. It would double the insurance costs for employers in this country and it would be a tsunami, and they have a lot of side effects.
Senator Kim (01:38:46):
You said you support it, but that you don't see it being the tool of choice for, especially young kids, is that correct?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:38:56):
Exactly. For people who have morbid obesity, for people who have diabetes, absolutely. And they shouldn't be prescribed alone without also prescriptions for exercise because otherwise, they eat away at muscle and they're counterproductive, they go after muscle first. They have all kinds of bad side effects, about half the people on GLPs get off of them after two years and then there's problems when you get off them, so it is-
Senator Kim (01:39:29):
I wanted to-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:39:29):
… Go ahead.
Senator Kim (01:39:31):
… I wanted to move on to just clarify some statements you made in the past. In the past you said, "Wi-Fi radiation does all kinds of bad things including causing cancer," do you still stand by that statement?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:39:42):
Yes. I won a case in front of the Court of Appeals against the FCC on that very issue.
Senator Kim (01:39:48):
And do you feel the same way about 5G?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:39:51):
Well, I'm just saying, electromagnetic radiation does.
Senator Kim (01:39:56):
An RF you think-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:39:57):
Yeah.
Senator Kim (01:39:58):
… Causes. Another issue that comes before your work if you were to be confirmed-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:40:03):
And let me just clarify that. It changes DNA, and there are scientific studies that have linked it to cancer, many of them. But it does other things, including neurological injury, that are the front-line injuries that we're most concerned about and that are best documented.
Senator Kim (01:40:23):
… One other issue that comes before your work if you're confirmed, I wanted to ask if you would support and continue and expand CDC's role in collecting and disseminating data on firearm mortality in the United States. Something that…
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:40:35):
I believe that we need to study the causes of mass shootings, we need to study all the causes.
Senator Kim (01:40:47):
You said earlier in response on Avian flu, you would continue the investments that you would support vaccine development. I just want to clarify, does that mean you support investments in mRNA vaccine research and development?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:41:02):
I am not going to pick a vaccine right now, I need to look at all the data, I need to look at safety data and advocacy data. But I'm going to continue research on every kind of vaccine.
Senator Kim (01:41:16):
Mr. Chair, I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (01:41:18):
Thank you, Senator Kim. And now, Senator Banks.
Senator Banks (01:41:21):
Thank you Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, President Trump just won a historic election victory and you are a big part of it. At the outset of the hearing, you talked about those MAHA Moms, that coalition that you led, that movement that was behind you that supported President Trump on election day, giving him one of the biggest electoral college votes in my lifetime, you were a part of that. The voters voted for President Trump, and President Trump by the way is a man of his word, he always follows through on what he says he's going to do. And one of the things that he said he was going to do was put you front and center in this administration to make America healthy again. And that's why at the end of the day, a lot of those moms have been here yesterday and today from Indiana to support you in this movement, and that's why you have my full support. And anything other than voting for you, to confirm you would be thumbing my nose at that movement, the millions of people in this country who want us to focus on making America healthy again.
(01:42:21)
One of the things I've thought a lot about, I serve on the Armed Services Committee as well, I just left another hearing with the nominee to be our new secretary of the Army, is the national security risk of an obese nation. 70% of our kids are not eligible today to serve in the United States military. And the Army, two years ago, was 25% off of its recruitment goals and obesity among our kids is one of the reasons why, and I think you would agree. My first question for you, this epidemic in this country is as much of a public health risk as it is a national security risk, would you agree with that?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:42:57):
Absolutely, Senator. And like I said, well, I didn't say this, when my uncle was present, 3% of Americans were obese, and today 74% are obese or overweight. In Japan, 3% are obese, so what we're seeing here is not happening elsewhere. And American kids did not suddenly get gluttonous and lazy, something is poisoning them, and we need to figure that out and then we need to end those exposures, we need the gold standard science. And all of these MAHA Moms recognize that we now have a unique opportunity in history where history now is at an inflection point where we have a unique opportunity to reverse this epidemic.
(01:43:49)
And we know what we have to do, we have to study the additives, we have to end the conflicts of interest on the nutrition panels and on the drug panels that are loaded with people who have corrupt entanglements with the industries they're supposed to regulate, that have turned these agencies into sock puppets for the industries they're supposed to regulate. We need somebody who can come in who can break that inertia. We are attracting the most talented group of people that work in NIH and CDC and FDA in modern history and people who are not coming there for jobs, they're innovators, they're disruptors, they're entrepreneurs, and they're coming in not because they want position, but because they actually want to change things and give us gold standard science and make America healthy.
Senator Banks (01:44:42):
And I know you agree that fitness is a part of that, a major part of that.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:44:45):
Absolutely. My uncle started the Presidential Council on physical fitness. I won a contest when I was in school, I got an award for it, and it was a piece of pride for me and for many people in my generation, I'm sure coach won his.
Speaker 2 (01:45:03):
Sure.
Senator Banks (01:45:04):
I want to move on to another national security threat. The biggest existential threat to America is the Chinese Communist Party. And right now, we're importing one third of our medicines from China and even more of our generic drugs come from China, it's a public health risk and a national security risk. What can you do as HHS Secretary to reduce our reliance on China and help our domestic manufacturers?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:45:29):
This is a huge priority for President Trump, he sees this as perhaps our greatest national security vulnerability. Over the past few years, so much of our critical, of our essential medicines, the production of them and the supply chains have been exported to China and it's a crisis now in our country. If there is a pandemic, if there is a war, if there's any conflicts, China will now be able to ransom American health. And that is not a good situation, we need to bring that production home, and President Trump is committed to doing just that.
Senator Banks (01:46:10):
Well, sir, I think you're going to have a tough job, you have my full support, but you've got lawmakers against you, you're going to have bureaucrats against you, you're going to be working with the limits of the administrative state at the department. But I'll have your back and I want to work with you to get it done to support-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:46:26):
Thank you, Senator Banks.
Senator Banks (01:46:26):
… This movement. Thank you, I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (01:46:29):
Senator Blunt Rochester.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:46:33):
Thank you, Chairman Cassidy and ranking member Sanders. Mr. Kennedy, during our meeting, you shared your vision for the department and we discussed priorities important to my home state of Delaware. But I must say, as a former cabinet secretary and a health official in my state, in listening to your answers today in this hearing, I am deeply concerned and shocked by your apparent lack of understanding of frankly some of the basic responsibilities of the department. It's one of the largest, most complex, and it is vitally important, and yesterday, during your finance hearing and today, you confused details about Medicare and Medicaid. You didn't know what authorities you have under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act known as EMTALA, and you made false claims about the safety of Mifepristone.
(01:47:34)
However, what concerns me the most as a mom and a first-time grandmother, is your decades long track record of promoting vaccine misinformation and profiting from it despite the harms that it may cause to American children. And with that, I'll turn to my questions. In yesterday's hearing, you did not seem to know anything about EMTALA even though I raised it with you during our meeting last week. So I'll give you another opportunity, yes or no, do you believe that a person presenting to an emergency room with a severe illness should have any type of emergency care needed to save their life?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:13):
Any American who the law says.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:17):
Yes, or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:18):
I'm answering the question, any American.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:20):
Yes or no was the direction.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:21):
Under the law, every American who presents to emergency room must be treated, and I can enforce that law and I believe that's the right thing to do.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:30):
Do you agree that a person who is experiencing severe pregnancy complications should be able to receive emergency care to save their life if that care is an abortion?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:42):
My understanding of President Trump's policy is that women-
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:45):
I'm not asking you President Trump's policy, I'm asking you what do you believe?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:50):
… Yeah, if it's necessary to save the life of the mother, of course.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:51):
So you do believe-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:48:51):
Of course, yes.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:48:54):
… Yes, they should. Do you commit to ensuring that pregnant women will have access to all necessary emergency care, including an abortion if it is required to save their life or preserve their life?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:49:06):
If it's required to save their life.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:49:07):
And would you agree that the ability to provide quality emergency care for pregnant women is essential to preventing maternal mortality?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:49:17):
Providing care for pregnant women? We should be providing care for pregnant women, President Trump wants to do that.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:49:24):
Bottom line for me, women should not be forced to rely on emergency airlifts to other states for life-saving care. And to be blunt, in our meeting, your lack of understanding really was very concerning. In a 2023 interview, you described yourself saying, "I'm a Kennedy Democrat, I believe in labor unions, I believe in a strong, robust middle class, I believe in racial justice." And just yesterday and today during this hearing and the hearing yesterday, you said we need to respect diversity. Mr. Kennedy, the Trump administration recently issued an executive order that directs the federal government to eliminate grants, contracts, policies, programs, and activities that include diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility. This executive order has already caused widespread confusion, fear and uncertainty for healthcare providers, researchers, public health professionals, and service providers across the country. You said in our meeting that you understand that health disparities exist. So yes or no, in your view, do the following programs count as health DEI programs, programs that target black women to address the maternal mortality crisis?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:50:43):
Senator, there are seven.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:50:45):
Yes or no?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:50:46):
I'm not going to answer that yes or no. If you want an answer, I'm happy to give it to you, but it's not a yes or no.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:50:54):
I just want a yes or no.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:50:54):
It's not susceptible to yes or no answer. If you want to hear an answer, Senator-
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:50:57):
Let me shift this because I only have 36-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:50:59):
… If you want to hear an answer, Senator-
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:51:00):
… I've got 36-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:51:01):
… I'm very happy to give you one.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:51:02):
… I've got now 33 seconds. And there are people out here who want to understand that if they are at a pride parade and there're a healthcare provider, can they give out a brochure? They want to know-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:51:12):
If you want people to understand, let me answer the question.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:51:12):
… If they're trying to have a program in a black church that is on Martin Luther King Day, will they be able to have that program? Will it be funded? Will they get in trouble? Will they be fired? That's the cause and concern, we all know that it's important that we have a healthy country. But as you said, of this-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:51:31):
You want me to answer the question, Senator?
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:51:33):
… I think I got my answer.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:51:35):
Great.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:51:35):
Thank you, and I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (01:51:39):
I'll allow the witness to answer.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:51:42):
There are seven departments at NIH that protect minority health and that seek to eliminate the shocking and unacceptable disparities in minority health. I believe in helping all people who are vulnerable. The EI programs that President Trump eliminated have spent $63 million with no discernible positive impact on human health in this country. There's institutions already that exist and existed before President Biden whose job it is to do just that.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:52:26):
Will you cut those programs that you just referenced?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:52:30):
That decision is up to Congress, not to the HHS Secretary.
Senator Blunt Rochester (01:52:34):
Thank you, I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (01:52:36):
For the record, treating a miscarriage or ectopic pregnancy is not an abortion, it's just false. And so since I'm not into misinformation, I would ask that misinformation not continually be repeated. Senator Husted.
Senator Husted (01:53:04):
Thank you very much. Mr. Kennedy, thank you for the [inaudible 01:53:05]. It's that way. Thank you for the work that you have done to create awareness about the food we eat and how it affects our health, particularly with our children. And you have helped put that on the American agenda rightfully so, and I appreciate that. I want to share with you a few statistics. According to the CDC, obesity prevalence is around 42% among adults with lower incomes compared to 31% among higher income individuals. That the relationship is strong among women, 45% of low income women are obese compared to 29% of higher income women.
(01:53:45)
I know I have had this conversation over the course of my public service career many, many times because at the states, we run the Medicaid program that it impacts those health statistics, that obesity impacts our programs, the cost of them, the quality of life of the people who are served. And I also get this question about why in the world does the federal government continue to subsidize programs that lead to unhealthy foods, and why do we operate programs in the way that we do like with SNAP that pays for foods that we know are causing people to be unhealthy?
(01:54:30)
And I know you don't have the sole authority in this matter, the Department of Agriculture and the Congress certainly has an impact on that, but could you just shed some light on how you see your role in trying to impact that? Because we see that these policies are disproportionately affecting poor people and the inability to change them and make America healthy again is having a disproportionate effect not only on them, but the cost of all of these programs we're trying to maintain.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:55:04):
Thank you for the question, Senator. NIH has been diverted away from studying the etiology of chronic disease. So there's almost nothing at NIH, very, very low percentage of its budget, a $42 billion budget that is devoted to finding out why we're having this obesity epidemic. We know it's an environmental toxin, epidemics are not caused by genes, that genes may provide a vulnerability, you need an environmental toxin. Why aren't we devoting science to finding out what those toxins are and then eliminating them?
(01:55:51)
The focus is on infectious disease and we almost altogether ignore chronic disease, which causes 92% of the deaths in this country. And during COVID, we had the highest death rate of any country in the world, we had 16% of the COVID deaths. We only have 4.2% of the world's population, no country did as poorly as us. You ask CDC why is that? They say because we are the sickest people on earth, the average person who died from COVID had 3.8 chronic diseases. American blacks were dying from COVID greater than almost any population in the world, about over 3000 deaths per million population. The only people worse are Indian reservations, which have an even a higher rate and the only person who did worse globally were Samoans.
(01:56:47)
The American Blacks were disproportionately impacted because they disproportionately have diabetes, obesity, cardiac illnesses, and other chronic disease. We need to start studying those and we need to get rid of the conflicts in the agency that obstructs those studies and that are focused on advancing the mercantile interests of the food industry and the pharmaceutical industry rather than the health of the American people.
Senator Husted (01:57:18):
Well, I would ask you, if confirmed, to take a leadership role across the agencies to advise us on what policy changes we must make to both not make it worse, but to make it better. Because we subsidize, literally we have policies as a government that encourages the production of foods and the sale of foods to particularly our poorest Americans that lead to these problems. We are literally creating the problem that we're trying to solve, and your recommendations would be very much appreciated.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:57:54):
We already have liaisons with the USDA, with Brooke Rollins with whom I have a very good relationship so that we can work collaboratively to reduce the chronic disease and the exposures that are causing them.
Senator Husted (01:58:11):
Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (01:58:14):
Senator Hickenlooper.
Senator Hickenlooper (01:58:16):
Thank you Mr. Chair, and thank you Mr. Kennedy. Bobby, we share a mutual oldest best friend and I respect that affection that you have for him very much. You did talk a little longer in your introduction, so I'm going to try to urge concision because I've got three or four questions. As I said, when we met, I'm still very concerned about the issues around vaccination, but I thought I'd start with the ability of Medicare to negotiate drug prices, which was finally okayed in 2022. It will save Medicare plan a hundred billion dollars in the next 10 years, probably $1.5 billion out of consumers pockets Medicare patients in just 2026 alone.
(01:59:01)
Yesterday, you said that the Trump administration had issued a statement to lowering the cost of prescription drugs and continuing the negotiation program. I went back and looked at that and it was a statement that mentioned increasing transparency and then said they would solicit feedback on the Medicare drug price. But nowhere did it say in the statement that the administration was actually going to commit to lowering prices. So is that something you still feel that that negotiation program and lowering those prices is important?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (01:59:31):
I've spoken to President Trump about negotiations, he's absolutely committed to negotiating lower drug prices.
Senator Hickenlooper (01:59:40):
Great, I appreciate that. You've also spoken much on the need to focus on prevention of chronic disease, which I think everyone shares, the MAHA movement is alive in Colorado as well as everywhere else. People are frustrated by the fact that for every dollar we spend on healthcare in this country and as has been previously said, often double any other country, only a nickel goes to prevention. So when you look at that a hundred billion dollars that's going to be saved over the next 10 years through the negotiation of pharmaceuticals, do you have any ideas of how we could put that towards prevention, that revenue?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:00:22):
Well, that's a really good question, Senator Hickenlooper. There's two things, there's two areas-
Senator Hickenlooper (02:00:30):
I'm going to give you 40 seconds because I've got two more questions.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:00:34):
… Okay. Medicaid, Medicare, and Obamacare should, we should be moving to value-based care, which includes prevention. And then the other arm is that NIH, CDC and FDA, which should identify the toxins that are contributing chronic disease and eliminating them.
Senator Hickenlooper (02:00:53):
Great. Another short question with Mifepristone, which has been described and discussed a lot already, and I understand your commitment to follow the policy of the president, but he has other tools at his behest. If there needs to be another study or looking at the other existing studies, will you make sure that there's no bias to the best of our human ability to twist those results in any way to support that policy? And I'm speaking now just about the defense of science to make sure that those reviews are fair.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:01:28):
Senator, I will commit to you here today to review prior to approving any study at NIH to allow you to approve the protocols and the researchers and help us choose the research. All I want is good science, and I would love input from this committee on any study that we do. There's many ways that studies are flawed and you can correct those at the outset in a lot of ways. So absolutely, I will work with you to make sure that it's science that you're satisfied with and I'm satisfied with.
Senator Hickenlooper (02:02:02):
That shows that this is the first time you're being considered for a cabinet position because no other person would ever solicit and willingly approve our participation.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:02:10):
I'm going to make that commitment, I know the hazard of it, but I'm going to do it anyway.
Senator Hickenlooper (02:02:13):
I'll hold you to it. Now let me get to the vaccines, and I think this is crucial because I think there is widespread distrust and increasing destruction in the scientific community. I'm a scientist, some have argued that I'm the only scientist in the Senate left that actually, I've written research papers and peer-reviewed journals, I think I understand how it works. And that is, a healthy skepticism is useful, but we want to make sure that's a healthy skepticism.
(02:02:43)
And yesterday in the discussion about Lyme disease, you said in your discussion that it was formulated to be a militaristic bio weapon that you had heard that in three books but you hadn't read through. And I think at a certain point, if you're going to be an activist or some people would say a prophet, that what you say becomes promoting something, promoting an idea. And I think when you've only read three books or little bits of the three books, not the whole three books, isn't that reckless, there's something about, aren't you then promoting this anti-science, the conspiracy about Lyme disease in this case, but the same thing about some of these vaccine issues?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:03:33):
Like I said, I never endorsed the issue, I said it's out there. For me not to acknowledge that is a form of manipulation. For me to say there is no question here, the government-proclaimed orthodoxy is true, anybody who believes it is a dissident.
Senator Hickenlooper (02:03:52):
I'm out of time. And I appreciate the things, I just leave it that just because we do have one out-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:03:57):
I understand.
Senator Hickenlooper (02:03:58):
… Wait, one out of 36 kids, that we can't explain what it was, it's not fair to put that blame onto all kinds of things, but focus on vaccinations. I yield back.
Senator Cassidy (02:04:11):
Dr. Moody. Senator Moody, I'm sorry.
Senator Moody (02:04:18):
[inaudible 02:04:14]. Good morning, thank you for joining us, and thank you for sitting down with me and spending so much time with me. In my office, it has been an overwhelming week, I am the junior-most senator on this committee and certainly you treated me no differently than the chairman and I'm grateful to you for that.
(02:04:32)
One of the topics we spent a long time talking about was your assurance and knowledge and understanding that it was the states that in fact gave limited power to the federal government and not the other way around. And your assurance that you will not use your agency or any organization that falls under your leadership to interfere with the state's ability to set policy or any autonomy of the state to enact or enforce laws that protect the lives of the unborn. I think that that is a concern of many, it was certainly one of mine, and you allayed those concerns and I appreciated you spending so much time with your assurances.
(02:05:13)
I want to turn to some of the discussions regarding many, which would say the government and health professionals did great harm to science and medicine in the wake of COVID-19. America, I believe, is at a crossroads where unfortunately things that used to not be particularly political like science and medicine, are now politicized to the point where reality is distorted, what you believe has little to do with truth or facts and everything to do with your party. My hope is that you, Mr. Kennedy, and President Trump's other appointees will break this cycle that is threatening America and destroying its promise.
(02:05:53)
Certainly while I was the Attorney General of Florida, I had the responsibility in numerous areas to seek the truth and bring justice, working with Governor DeSantis and other leaders, we launched grand jury investigations. And I want to bring your attention to one of those grand jury investigations that dealt with COVID-19 and the actions of government officials and big Pharma. And remember that a grand jury investigation is made up of laypeople, 18 in this instance that were brought from different communities in Florida, and I just want to read into the record one paragraph for your consideration.
(02:06:33)
Much of the goodwill by the COVID-19 vaccines was squandered in the following years as sponsors and federal regulators collaborated to push out booster after booster based on shallow and accurate safety and efficacy data sidelining their own ombudsman to get doses of these vaccines into the arms of every American, regardless of their underlying risk from the SARS COVID-2 virus. As well gatekeepers became cheerleaders, as federal regulators with the trust of the American people dragged their feet and publicly confirming important safety and then sanctioned long delays and mandatory post-marketing studies involving those very same signals. Sponsors abused the scientific journal system and regulatory reporting requirements delaying public disclosure of serious adverse events from their clinical trials for years, and I could go on. Mr. Kennedy, as Secretary of Health and Human Services, will you use your position to squelch medical or scientific views with which you disagree?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:07:35):
Never. And this is relevant to what Senator Hickenlooper was asking me. We've tried this system where government lies to Americans or where they tell them about it that they have it with a level of assurance, they don't feel themselves and it isn't working. The initial COVID vaccine, Americans flocked to get it,
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:08:00):
I think 90, 95% of Americans went and got it. CDC has now recommended an eighth booster and only 23% of Americans at most are taking it. It's because 77% of Americans no longer trust CDC. That's not a good thing. If we want uptake of vaccines, we need a trustworthy government. In other nations where they don't have mandates like Japan and a few years ago in Germany, they had the same uptake as we did or without any mandates because people trust their government. That's what I want to restore to the American people and the vaccine program. I want people to know if the government says something, it's true. It's not manipulative.
Senator Moody (02:08:45):
And I don't-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:08:46):
It's not a noble truth, which is what a certain doctor called his lies.
Senator Moody (02:08:50):
Certainly, I don't have a lot of time, but I would like to bring your attention to another grand jury investigation that we did in Florida, and I would ask Mr. Chairman to enter into the hearing record to grand jury reports related to human trafficking and COVID-19, to have your commitment that any organization under your purview will work with the states, not impede our investigations to ensure that children that are in this country, that are minors, that are under your purview, that you will communicate with us so that we can have the information to make sure that they are safe unlike in an investigation where Biden blocked us in this administration at every turn to keep us from getting information showing that they trafficked children that were brought into this country and lost dozens. Tens of thousands of children, lost track of them and never gave us in DCF, in Florida the information so that we could protect them to have your word that you'll protect children if you're given that responsibility.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:09:44):
Absolutely. And President Trump is determined to find the 300,000 children who are lost over the past four years and to return them to their parents.
Senator Moody (02:09:54):
Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (02:09:56):
Without objection, it can be entered into the record. Senator Markey.
Sen. Markey (02:10:00):
Thank you. Yesterday under oath, you told my colleagues on the Senate Finance Committee that when you went to Samoa in June of 2019, it had "nothing to do with vaccines." Will you confirm again today that the trip had nothing to do with vaccines?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:10:20):
My purpose in going down there had nothing to do with vaccines.
Sen. Markey (02:10:24):
Well, I have in my hand a blog post in 2021 in which you say the anti-vaccine group children's health defense, which you ran, offered to fund the purpose of the trip to Samoa. And in the same post, you state that the trip was ultimately arranged by an anti-vaccine activist. And during the trip you met with an activist who later compared vaccine mandates to Nazi Germany. And during that trip you also discussed vaccines with the Prime Minister and the director general of health of Samoa. The Director General of Health said you specifically discussed your views on vaccine safety fears. And with unanimous consent, I will submit those blog posts, Mr. Chairman, into the record.
Senator Cassidy (02:11:12):
Without objection.
Sen. Markey (02:11:15):
I'm going to ask you … I'll ask you again. Did the trip have nothing to do with vaccines as you told my colleagues [inaudible 02:11:23]?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:11:23):
Nothing to do with vaccines. And if you want me to explain, I will.
Sen. Markey (02:11:28):
Did it have anything to do with vaccines?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:11:29):
No, it did not.
Sen. Markey (02:11:31):
It did not.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:11:32):
Well, my purpose in the trip was not to … I ended up having conversations with people, some of whom I never intended to meet.
Sen. Markey (02:11:40):
Again, an anti-vaxxer helped finance your trip?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:11:43):
Well, you call them an anti-vaxxer. That's not what they would call themselves. They call themselves safe vaccine advocates. I went down there at CHD, which was that group obtained a grant for $ 6 million to install aid to digitalize the health records of Samoa.
Sen. Markey (02:12:05):
Let me just go on here.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:12:07):
It's state-of-the-art medical informatic system. That was the purpose of my trip, Senator.
Sen. Markey (02:12:12):
Thank you, Mr. Kennedy. I got it. Thank you. So let me just follow through now, 2019. So now, in October of 2019, the CDC declared a measles outbreak in Samoa. In November, Samoa started a mass vaccination campaign to stop the outbreak. That same month, November of 2019, after 16 people had already died from the outbreak and Samoa was trying to respond to the crisis, you sent a letter to the Prime Minister of Samoa stating that "it is a regrettable possibility that these children are causalities of the vaccine." By unanimous consent, I will introduce that letter into the record
Senator Cassidy (02:12:52):
Without objection.
Sen. Markey (02:12:53):
So as Samoa was trying to contain the outbreak, you were saying that it was the fault of the vaccine rather than the absence of vaccinations that caused the outbreak in Samoa in the same year you visited Samoa.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:13:09):
And I replied to that, Senator-
Sen. Markey (02:13:11):
Well, hold on, let me just finish. The death count in Samoa grew to 83 and ultimately volunteers in New Zealand sent tiny coffins to help bury the dozens of children who died. And the Samoan Director General of Health later said with his last name and the status attached to it, "People will believe him. People will believe Robert Kennedy." And a New Zealand vaccinologist later said the impact of your role was devastating. So your name and your profile helped fuel a measles outbreak. You scared people from taking a vaccine. It slowed the public health response and children died. You've taken no responsibility thus far. And if an outbreak occurs in the United States, I have no evidence that you would not use your role as secretary to spread dangerous misinformation. So one incident from my perspective, disqualifies you from holding any position in healthcare, much less the number one health official in the United States. And 75 Nobel Prize winners in science have said very clearly that you should not be confirmed that it would be dangerous for you to have-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:14:33):
And you should look at their conflicts, Senator. You should look at their conflicts of those individuals.
Sen. Markey (02:14:38):
Well, 75 Nobel-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:14:40):
And you should look at who financed that letter.
Sen. Markey (02:14:42):
75 Nobel Prize winners. And by the way, of a high percentage of the medical community in Boston, the health capital of the United States and the world have said the same thing about your qualifications. They're saying to me they don't want tiny coffins as well. Neither do I. So that's the basis of my reservations about you and the reason why I'm going to vote no on your candidacy because I just think it's too dangerous to run the threat that that misinformation is spread in our country in the same way it was in Samoa.
Senator Cassidy (02:15:24):
Senator Murkowski. And let me compliment Mullen and Murkowski. They've stayed here the entire conference and they're not obligated to like the two of us. Not that we wouldn't have otherwise. But Senator Murkowski, you please.
Sen. Murkowski (02:15:35):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And I think these are exactly the types of forums that we all need to be engaged in from start to finish because-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:15:44):
Can you speak up, Senator Murkowski?
Sen. Murkowski (02:15:47):
There's been considerable discussion here about many issues, certainly, a lot about vaccines. I care deeply about making sure that our vaccines are safe, the efficacy of them, the availability of them, how we disseminate them is particularly important in a very, very rural state like mine. You have experience there. You understand that. I am particularly attracted by the focus on chronic diseases. We know that if we can do a better job with chronic diseases, maybe some of the other things that we are susceptible to in the infectious diseases area, we're able to perhaps pull back a little bit on that. But our reality is in order to make this country healthy again, it is a focus on everything. It is the prevention. It is the necessity of coming up with these life-saving vaccines that are going to be so critically important. It is personal care, it is food, it is exercise, it is all of the above. And we got to figure it together. We do need to shake some things up, but we also need to give a level of confidence. And this is what I'm hearing from so many of my colleagues who have raised the issue of vaccines. We have made some considerable gains in my state of Alaska with vaccinating the many people in very rural areas where one disease outbreak can wipe out an entire village. We saw this in 1918 with the Spanish flu and that's why everyone was rattled to the core. Villages were shut down entirely, entirely during COVID because of the fear of transmission. And so they're looking for these life-saving ways and means.
(02:17:39)
And so when there is a lack of confidence, when there is a doubt, it's like, "Well, what do I do?" And so we pulling back then on again these areas where we can work to prevent some of these deadly diseases that we thought we had wiped out years ago. We have dramatically reduced diseases in my state like Hep A and B and meningitis. We're just now getting through a tough bout of whooping cough that came around to the state. Now there's a scare in the peninsula in Alaska about a measles outbreak. So we can't be going backwards with our vaccinations that will allow for this level of prevention and protection.
(02:18:35)
So I'm asking, you are clearly an influencer, you are clearly an influencer. You would not be in this position today, but you can see how your podium, your platform, your voice can influence so many. So I am asking you on the issue of vaccines specifically to please convey with a level of authority and science, but also with a level of conviction and free of conflict and free of political bias that these are measures that we should be proud of as a country. Proud of as a country.
(02:19:20)
Look to what President Trump was able to do with the COVID vaccine. It was extraordinary and it did save lives. I need time for a question. I'm asking you to focus on how you can use your position to provide for greater levels of confidence to the public when it comes to these life-saving areas. So I'm going to pivot to a question that you can answer. This relates-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:19:52):
I can answer that one too.
Sen. Murkowski (02:19:53):
I know, but I have 43 seconds and no one has talked about our native populations. When you look at our health statistics, whether it's Alaska Natives or whether it is American Indians, our health statistics in this country, you know very well because we talked about them are not where they need to be. And it's in all categories. It's infectious disease, it's tuberculosis, it's Hep C, it's mental health, it's depression, it's substance use, it's sexually transmitted diseases, it's hypertension, stroke. It is so deep and it is so challenging and it is so hard. You have received support from Native American tribes. You have been in these areas, you have been quoted. And I'd like for your comment on this as quoted saying, "As far as budgeting for Indian country," you said you would immediately triple the budget to support tribes. Can you expand on this pledge and the commitment? Because this is an area where we have truly left our native people behind when it comes to their health and their health outcomes.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:21:02):
Thank you, Senator. And this is an issue as you and I talked about, that is very important. It's always been a priority for me. I spent 20% of my career working on native issues. I was one of the founding editors of Indian Country Today, which is the biggest Indian newspaper. My father and uncle, Ted Kennedy, my father, were deeply, deeply critical of the functioning of the Indian Health Service back in 1968 to 1980. And nothing's changed. Nothing's gotten better. I'm going to bring in a native at the assistant secretary level. I'd like to get them actually designated as a assistant secretary for the first time in American history. Make sure that all of the decisions that we make in our agency are conscious of their impacts on the First Nations.
(02:21:55)
I've spent a lot of time in your state, it's my favorite place to go. I've been up with a Gwich'in representing the Gwich'in people up in Arctic Village and been all over the state in the remote areas. I understand Alaska, unique needs of Alaska because of remote healthcare, because some of these areas are not even accessible except for airplane. They don't have ambulance services that the federal government needs to pay attention to financing, transportation, the unusual ways that are required there and that we really need to focus on telemedicine and AI. Make sure that even in remote places in Alaska, native people can get high-quality healthcare. And we can do that today. And I look forward to working with you on those issues and others.
Sen. Murkowski (02:22:49):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Cassidy (02:22:50):
Senator Murkowski says the record for going over. Senator Alsobrooks.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:22:56):
Sorry. Good morning. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
(02:22:59)
Mr. Kennedy. I was struck by your comments during our meeting last week.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:23:04):
The what?
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:23:05):
I was struck by your comments in our meeting last week where you made it abundantly clear to me that you intended to clean house of the professional scientist at the National Institutes of Health, which you know is headquartered in the state of Maryland and employs thousands of hardworking Marylanders. I for the record, believe in scientists and I believe in doctors and I trust them over politicians without medical degrees.
(02:23:34)
You talked about bad science and bad scientists and in fact, you specifically said to me in response to my question that you intend to replace the bad scientists with the good scientists. And so I want to ask you, in your opinion, what makes a scientist or a doctor qualified to serve at the National Institutes of Health?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:23:54):
A scientist who's devoted to empirical methodology to evidence-based science, scientists who understand the importance of replication, importance of publishing raw data and being open and transparent about it, the importance of publishing peer review. NIH has overseen over the past several years, the precipitous decline in American Health. There's 91,000 people at HHS. And are you suggesting that some of them should not be held responsible for that decline? They were in charge of protecting our health-
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:24:31):
Let me just insert here.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:24:32):
Let me just finish.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:24:34):
Let me just say this because I only have three minutes left. I don't set the rules here, but I ask the questions. And the question is really whether you intend, as you said, to substitute essentially your judgment for the judgment of these professional scientists and doctors.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:24:50):
Well, I'm not going to substitute my judgment for science. Of course, I'm not going to do that. What I'm going to do, listen, the New York Times just did an article last week talking about the fraud, the twenty-year fraud, 800 fraudulent studies produced by NIH on amyloid blacks and not allowing any other hypothesis about the cause of Alzheimer's to be explored.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:25:13):
Well, how would you decide, Mr. Kennedy, which scientists are bad scientists? Are they the ones who disagree with you?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:25:19):
The ones who are corrupt, the ones who have been doing science like the amyloid black studies that were fraudulent. We should not-
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:25:27):
Let me ask you a question. Do you have a medical degree?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:25:30):
Do I, no.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:25:31):
Okay, let me go to the next question. The Heritage Fund has compiled a watch list of federal employees to go after federal staff. Is there a watch list for federal staff at HHS?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:25:43):
Not that I know of.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:25:45):
Have you or has anyone in the administration developed a list of scientists or federal staff that you would target for termination?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:25:54):
Not that I know of.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:25:58):
And let me just ask you another question. Now, your failed presidential campaign has been raising money to try and cover your debts and you were questioned about this yesterday and failed to answer a question that Senator Warren asked you. And so I want to ask you again regarding these emails that you have sent to raise money. How much has your presidential campaign made fundraising off of this administration's complete disregard for the workforce at HHS?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:26:29):
Excuse me, I didn't hear the question. The last part.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:26:32):
How much money has your presidential campaign made off of fundraising off of this administration's complete disregard for the workforce at HHS?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:26:42):
Zero.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:26:43):
Okay. Mr. Chair, I'd like to ask unanimous consent to enter into the record two emails from this week and the week before regarding fundraising that you are currently doing through your presidential campaign.
Senator Cassidy (02:26:55):
Without objection.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:26:57):
And finally, I want to ask you, you said to … You were on a show on February 26th, 2021, an interview with Dr. Judy Mikovits where you said the following, and I quote, "We should not be giving black people the same vaccine schedule that's given to whites because their immune system is better than ours." Can you please explain what you meant?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:27:24):
There's a series of studies, I think most of them by Poland that show that to particular antigens that blacks have a much stronger reaction. There's differences in reaction to different products by different races.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:27:41):
So I have 17 seconds left. Let me just ask you then. So what different vaccine schedule would you say I should have received? What different vaccine schedule should I have received?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:27:52):
I mean, the Poland article suggests that blacks need fewer antigens than-
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:28:00):
This is so dangerous.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:28:01):
So you get the same measles vaccine-
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:28:02):
Mr. Kennedy, with all due respect, that is so dangerous. Your voice would be a voice that parents would listen to that is so dangerous. I will be voting against your nomination because your views are dangerous to our state and to our country.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:28:17):
That is the truth of science. I mean, do you think science is dangerous, Senator? This is published peer-reviewed studies.
Sen. Alsobrooks (02:28:24):
I yield.
Senator Cassidy (02:28:27):
Senator Collins who would've been here the whole time, but she was in an Intel committee.
Sen. Collins (02:28:32):
Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (02:28:32):
So, Senator Collins.
Sen. Collins (02:28:33):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Kennedy, welcome, first of all.
(02:28:40)
I agree with you that there needs to be more focus on chronic diseases like diabetes, Alzheimer's. But it concerns me when I read a quote from you that says, "I'm going to say to NIH scientists, 'God bless you all. Thank you for your public service.' We're going to give infectious disease diseases a break for about eight years.'" Don't we need to do both? Don't we?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:29:12):
Absolutely, Senator. The problem is there's been an imbalance. We've devoted all of these dollars to infectious disease and to drug development to make NIH an incubator for the pharmaceutical industry and very little to chronic disease. But chronic disease is 92% of deaths in our country. It's nine out of every $10 we spend on our budget. Why aren't we devoting at least equivalent studies to determining the etiology of our chronic disease? It just seems like common sense to me.
Sen. Collins (02:29:47):
I would point out that in many cases, it's Congress rather than HHS who sets the funding levels for various diseases.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:29:59):
But NIH has panels that decide who gets funding, not Congress, Senator.
Sen. Collins (02:30:06):
I want to share with you a discussion that I had with the Maine pediatric nurse practitioner. She raised the concern that if people are discouraged from getting their children vaccinated, we will lose the herd immunity in a classroom. And that means that a child who may be immunosuppressed and cannot get a vaccine are at risk of being in a classroom with an unvaccinated child and thus at risk of getting the infectious disease because we've lost the herd immunity. What would be your response to that?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:30:57):
My response is that vaccine uptake for the COVID vaccine, for example, is down to 23% and all vaccines are dropping and they're doing that because people don't believe the government anymore. We need good science and I'm going to bring that in. I'm going to restore trust and that will restore vaccine uptake.
Sen. Collins (02:31:17):
Well, you're certainly correct about what happened with the COVID vaccine, but let me switch to the polio vaccine. Do you think that the polio vaccine is safe and effective?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:31:32):
Yes, I do.
Sen. Collins (02:31:34):
And so would you seek to reduce its availability in any way?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:31:40):
No, not at all.
Sen. Collins (02:31:43):
The state of Maine has a steady and disturbing increase in Lyme disease cases over the past decade. We talked a little bit about this in my office. In 2023, Maine had a record number of Lyme disease cases, nearly 3000 reported cases. Fortunately, there is a promising vaccine trial for Lyme disease that it's underway at Maine Health in Portland. Access to a Lyme disease would be a monumental step forward in reducing the burden of this disease, which can have lifelong effects. I've seen it in members of my own family.
(02:32:35)
As HHS Secretary if confirmed, what influence would you exercise over new vaccine approvals such as one for Lyme disease?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:32:48):
Senator, you and I have talked about this issue. I've had Lyme disease. I lived in the epicenter of Lyme disease. Every member of my family at my immediate family has had Lyme disease. I had a son whose face was paralyzed for a year. I have a son today who has been suffering with devastating effects from Lyme disease for two years. There's nobody who will fight harder to find a vaccine or a treatment for Lyme disease than me.
Sen. Collins (02:33:21):
I very much appreciate that assurance. And I'm sorry that your own family has been so adversely affected. In Maine, we have a lot of people who work outside and work in the woods and ticks are everywhere. So this is a very important issue to me. Thank you.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:33:43):
And to me too, Senator.
Senator Cassidy (02:33:46):
We're almost to the end. Let me acknowledge. Senator Moody has also been here the whole time, and so thank you, Senator Moody.
Senator Moody (02:33:55):
And I have to go to the Sheriff. But thank you for the recognition.
Senator Cassidy (02:33:57):
Yeah, just incredible diligence. Thank you. Both Senator Sanders and I will have a couple questions and then we'll each have a closing statement and then your long national nightmare will be over. So anyway.
(02:34:12)
First a couple more of commit-type questions. If you are confirmed, do you commit that you'll not work to impound, divert, or otherwise reduce any funding appropriated by Congress for the purpose of vaccination programs?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:34:27):
Yes.
Senator Cassidy (02:34:29):
And do you commit that you'll not impose new grant conditions outside of congressional direction for state, local, or global entities that in any way limits restricts or rescinds access to vaccines or vaccine promotion programs?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:34:43):
Yes.
Senator Cassidy (02:34:44):
And then this is the nice thing about listening to all of this. Let me ask this. I've been impressed. One, you've handled yourself very well. I've been impressed that on many things you are familiar with recent medical data, but on other things you haven't been. So let me bring up two things that are very pertinent. Now while sitting here, I went up to look at the medical literature on these issues and here's the title, Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy. And they found that fear of autism is a major driver for vaccine hesitancy among those with a college education or higher, influenced by internet, social media narratives over physician-based vaccine information.
(02:35:44)
I'll go back to something I said earlier. You got to follow it, man. There's a lot of people that look to you for do I get vaccinated or not, people that I kind of know. But here it says, it's not just my anecdote, it's actually out there. But when I raised and you said, well, if I show you the data, you'll change your … because I asked, will you unequivocally without qualification say that measles vaccine does not cause autism. And you said if I show you the data.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:36:13):
I will publicly apologize that, Senator, I was wrong.
Senator Cassidy (02:36:17):
Here's a meta analysis from 2014, and you quoted Cochrane on several occasions, which for people watching is a meta analysis. A meta meaning they look at everything and then they come to a conclusion based upon as much facts as they can get. And here is such a study. And the title tells it all. Vaccines are not associated with autism: an evidence-based meta-analysis of case-control and cohort studies. And they ended up looking at five cohort studies with roughly 1.2 million children. Now, this is from 2014 and it has a whole bunch of articles that references it. And then I got a text from a former employee of the NIH, I emphasize the former, who says that in early in the President Trump's term, you and colleagues sent 90 papers for review by people at NIH. They felt like these, the NIH folks felt that without exception, they were severely lacking methodologically and or found that they indeed showed the safety of these vaccines.
(02:37:24)
"We tried to engage Mr. Kennedy, but his colleagues refused to acknowledge the expertise of dozens of NIH scientists we made about those papers." Now you're a smart guy, you're reading the medical literature and you're coming up with recent medical literature on certain issues. But here is both an older article summarizing lots of older articles that have come out since the original refuted Wakefield article in The Lancet regarding measles and autism.
(02:37:58)
And here is somebody who … He said … but somebody who said that previously, you've had this presented to you. So back to me, I'm a doc trying to understand, convince me that you will become the public health advocate, but not just churn old information so that there's never a conclusion as Senator Hassan suggested, but that will become the influencer for people to believe no, there's 1.25 million kids studied and there's no autism associated with measles. You tell me. You see what my question is in there.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:38:42):
Senator, I'm going to be an advocate for strong science. You show me those scientific studies and you and I can meet about it. And there are other studies as well, and I'd love to show those to you. It was a study that came out last week of 47,000 nine-year-olds in the Medicaid system in Florida by I think a Louisiana scientist called Mohsen that shows the opposite. Oh, there are other studies out there. I just want to follow the science and I will do, if the science says, and I am wrong about what I've said in the past, as I said, I will publicly apologize. There's many times I've been wrong about science. If you look at my Instagram account, when I'm wrong, I apologize for it. And I say "I was wrong." I don't have any problems. Science is a process of challenging hypotheses with new evidence and scientists have to be able to admit when they're wrong. Epidemiological studies. The Institute of Medicine has had repeatedly in 2013, 2017
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:40:00):
… in 2017 when they investigated this, has asked CDC to do certain studies, animal studies, bench studies, observational studies, studies of the vaccine safety data link. CDC has not done that. I want them to do that and I want the best science. I can guarantee you, on my word of honor, that if you show me science that says that I'm wrong, I'm going to say I was wrong. I don't have any problem. There's nothing that would make me happier. We need to be able to look at the science and get IOM involved, the National Academy of Sciences. They're the ultimate arbiter of safety.
Senator Cassidy (02:40:41):
What was that?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:40:41):
One of the things we need to do, I think, is a subject that we haven't talked about here. Why don't we know what's causing this epidemic? Why hasn't the CDC been looking at other hypotheses to determine the etiology of why we've had this dramatic 1000% increase in this disease that is destroying our kids, is probably the biggest issue. Why don't we know the answer after 30 years of steady rises in autism rates? Why don't we know the answer to that? We should know the answer.
Senator Cassidy (02:41:21):
What was that last article that you mentioned?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:41:23):
That article is by Mawson, M-A-W-S-O-N.
Senator Cassidy (02:41:31):
And it's regarding measles and what?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:41:33):
No, it looks at the entire schedule and it says… It's a study of nine-year-old boys. 47,000 nine-year-old boys from the Florida healthcare data.
Senator Cassidy (02:41:45):
Okay, let me… Senator Sanders.
Senator Sanders (02:41:49):
Thank you. And I find myself in the unusual and uncomfortable position of having to agree with Senator Cassidy's line of questioning. Mr. Kennedy, in an interview in July 2023, you stated quote, "I do believe autism does come from vaccines." End of quote. And you have praised a gentleman named Andrew Wakefield for his research. You talk about the need to be science-based to get our information, good information to make decisions. What studies have you utilized to come to the conclusion that vaccines cause autism?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:42:38):
I'm happy to sit down with you.
Senator Sanders (02:42:40):
No, no, please just answer me that.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:42:43):
Look at the Mawson study, Senator.
Senator Sanders (02:42:44):
The what?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:42:45):
Mawson. Just look at that study.
Senator Sanders (02:42:47):
Yeah, I will. And that was published-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:42:49):
But I wouldn't rest on a single study, and all studies can be [inaudible 02:42:55].
Senator Sanders (02:42:55):
Okay. Don't mean to be rude. I don't have a lot of time.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:42:57):
Just saying-
Senator Sanders (02:42:58):
You would not be, I just heard you say you could not be happier if you were proved wrong. Mr. Chairman, I asked to put into the record 16 studies done by scientists and doctors all over the world saying that vaccines do not cause autism. Are you happy with that?
Senator Cassidy (02:43:19):
Without objection.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:43:19):
Look at the IOM assessment of 16 study, Senator. Because the IOM has assessed them.
Senator Sanders (02:43:27):
Let me get to it… Don't have a lot of time. I apologize.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:43:29):
I understand.
Senator Sanders (02:43:30):
I'm happy to talk to you at another time. I don't have a lot of time. Let's talk about COVID. And I just want clarity on the issue. And again, I apologize. You have to be brief. We don't have a lot of time. Scientists have estimated that the COVID vaccine saved 3 million lives. President Trump said COVID vaccine was what, quote, "One of the great miracles of the ages," end quote. You have said, "The COVID vaccine was the deadliest vaccine ever made," end of quote. Was the COVID vaccine the deadliest vaccine ever made?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:44:05):
The reason I said that, Senator Sanders, is because there were more reports on the VAERS system on the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, which is the only surveillance system. That and V-safe. And there were more reports of injuries and deaths than all other vaccines combined.
Senator Sanders (02:44:24):
But was it that… Scientists said it saved 3 million.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:44:29):
According to VAERS?… I don't know because we don't have a good surveillance system. Nobody [inaudible 02:44:34].
Senator Sanders (02:44:33):
You disagree with the scientific community that-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:44:36):
Oh, I'm agnostic because we don't have the science to make that determination really.
Senator Sanders (02:44:40):
Okay. Prescription drug prices in America, as you know-
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:44:47):
And by the way, I think President Trump did an extraordinary job on Warp Speed because he wasn't just focusing on that one intervention he was focusing [inaudible 02:44:55].
Senator Sanders (02:44:54):
He called it a miracle. But you have cast doubts on its efficacy.
(02:44:58)
All right, prescription drugs. We're going to make America healthy. I agree with you that we need a revolution in the nature of food in America, physical exercise, et cetera. Very, very important. But there are people who are going to get sick and they have to go to the doctor and find out why. One out of four Americans today cannot afford the prescription drugs their doctors prescribe because we pay by far the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs. We made some progress under the Biden administration of negotiating prescription drug prices with pharma. First time that's ever happened.
(02:45:39)
Now, yesterday, you told me that the White House was going to issue something affirming their support for continuing those Medicare negotiations. Turned out not to be quite accurate. They came up with some bland statement, could be written by pharma. Very specific questions. Do you believe and will you insist that Medicare continue to negotiate prices with the pharmaceutical industry so we can substantially lower prescription drug costs in America?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:46:07):
President Trump has made it very clear to me that he wants to negotiate prices.
Senator Sanders (02:46:11):
Negotiate is a big word, Bobby. It's a big word.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:46:13):
That's the word you just used, Senator.
Senator Sanders (02:46:16):
Yeah, but no, I used defend a particular law. Will you defend the law in the Inflation Reduction Act, which already is negotiating prescription drug prices.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:46:27):
President Trump wants us to negotiate drug prices. He wants the lower drug prices.
Senator Sanders (02:46:31):
So you're not telling me that you will defend the law that we passed, which has already had significant success.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:46:36):
Well, look, I'm going to comply with the law, Senator. Congress passed the law. I'm swearing an oath to the constitution. I'm going to comply with the laws.
Senator Sanders (02:46:45):
You're going to have a significant influence on healthcare policy if you're confirmed.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:46:48):
I'm going comply with the laws.
Senator Sanders (02:46:51):
Let me just say this in conclusion, Chairman Cassidy. President Trump and Mr. Kennedy are quite right when they say that our system is broken. They're right. Our economic system today is broken. Three people own more wealth than the bottom half of American society. Wages have been stagnant for American workers for 50 years. The economy is broken. You know what? Our political system is broken and corrupt. You have a handful of billionaires in both political parties who contribute huge amounts of money to elect candidates in this room throughout the United States Congress. That is a broken political system and a real threat to democracy. Our healthcare system is broken, and it's broken for some of the reasons that Mr. Kennedy indicated. We have not paid attention to the fact that we have massive amounts of chronic disease. We have not answered the question why, in the richest country in the history of the world, our life expectancy is lower than it is in countries far poorer than we are.
(02:48:06)
So I think in many ways, President Trump and Mr. Kennedy have asked some of the right questions. Problem is their answers will only make a bad situation worse. So let me ask Mr. Kennedy again. If we want to make America healthy, will you assure the American people that you will fight to do what every other major country on earth does, guarantee healthcare to every single American?
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:48:36):
I'm going to make America healthier than other countries in the world right now.
Senator Sanders (02:48:42):
Do you guarantee, do what every other major country does? It's a simple question.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:48:45):
And by the way, Bernie, the problem of corruption is not just in the federal agencies, it's in Congress too. Almost all the members of this panel are accepting, including yourself, are accepting millions of dollars from the pharmaceutical industry.
Senator Sanders (02:49:02):
Oh no. No, no, no.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:49:02):
And protecting their interests.
Senator Sanders (02:49:03):
No, I thought that that would… No. No, no, no. I ran for president like you. I got millions of millions of contributions. They did not come from the executives. Not one nickel of PAC money from the pharmaceutical industry. They came from workers.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:49:22):
In 2020, you were the single largest [inaudible 02:49:26].
Senator Sanders (02:49:25):
Because I had contributions from workers all over this country. Workers.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:49:32):
You were the single.
Senator Sanders (02:49:33):
Not a nickel from corporate PACs.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:49:35):
You were the single largest acceptor of pharmaceutical dollars.
Senator Sanders (02:49:39):
No, from workers in the industry.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (02:49:41):
1.5 million.
Senator Sanders (02:49:42):
Yeah, out of 200 million. All right, but you have not answered… Last question. You have not answered my question.
Speaker 3 (02:49:50):
Mr. Chairman.
Senator Sanders (02:49:50):
[inaudible 02:49:51] how do we make America healthy if you don't guarantee healthcare?
Speaker 3 (02:49:56):
We're literally three minutes over here now. How long does it keep going? At some time, you're just battering the witness.
Senator Sanders (02:50:01):
I'm not battering the witnesses.
Speaker 3 (02:50:02):
Yes, you are.
Senator Sanders (02:50:02):
I'm trying to get an answer.
Speaker 3 (02:50:03):
You're getting upset at him. You're going at him just like anybody else would.
Senator Cassidy (02:50:07):
We'll come to order. We'll come to order. Bernie, he's going over.
(02:50:20)
Before I ever entered politics, before I was ever thinking about running for office, I practiced medicine for 30 years. I worked in public hospitals in California, Louisiana, specialized in liver disease, caring for those who otherwise would not have had a specialist, if you will, dedicating my life to saving lives. That is being a doctor. That ethic guides me now.
(02:50:42)
In my opening statement, I told the story of my patient, an 18-year-old girl with acute liver failure from Hepatitis B, being air ambulanced to LSU Shreveport Hospital for a liver transplant. Now, let me finish the story. Her mother wasn't allowed to fly in the helicopter, so her mother drove the three hours from Baton Rouge to Shreveport. Now, when she arrived, they let her visit her daughter before she went back to the OR. And the mom goes in to say a prayer, squeezes the daughter's hand, the daughter's eyes open. And she said, "Mama," and the daughter began to recover. Powerful story, powerful story with a happy ending.
(02:51:31)
But as a doctor, I saw endings not so happy. I just had a friend text me two children died in a intensive care unit in a Baton Rouge hospital from vaccine-preventable diseases this past month. So my concern is that if there's any false note, any undermining of a mama's trust in vaccines, another person will die from a vaccine preventable disease.
(02:52:04)
Now, you've got a megaphone. Maybe you and Bernie, Bobby and Bernie. Of everybody in this room, the two of you have the biggest followings, tremendous credibility. And with that influence comes a great responsibility. Now, my responsibility is to learn, try and determine if you can be trusted to support the best public health, a worthy movement called MAHA, to improve the health of Americans or to undermine it, always asking for more evidence and never accepting the evidence that is there. I looked at the article from Dr. Mawson and it seems to have some issues. I'll just put that to the side.
(02:52:54)
And that is why I've been struggling with your nomination. There are issues. Man, ultra-processed food, obesity. We're simpatico. We're completely aligned. And as someone who has discussed immunizations with thousands of people, I understand that mothers want reassurance that the vaccine their child is receiving is necessary, safe, and effective. We agree on that point, the two of us. But we've approached it differently. And I think I can say that I've approached it using the preponderance of evidence to reassure and you have approached using selected evidence to cast doubt.
(02:53:32)
Now, put differently, we're about the same age, does a 70-year-old man, 71-year-old man who spent decades criticizing vaccines and who's financially vested in finding fault with vaccines, can he change his attitudes and approach now that he'll have the most important position influencing vaccine policy in the United States? Will you continue what you have been or will you overturn a new leaf at age 70? I recognize, man, if you come out unequivocally, "Vaccines are safe, it does not cause autism," that would have an incredible impact. That's your power. So what's it going to be? Will it be using the credibility to support lots of articles or will it be using credibility to undermine? And I got to figure that out from my vote. You have the power to help rebuild, to help public health institutions re-earn the trust of the American people.
(02:54:41)
Now, let's be political. I'm a Republican. I represent the amazing state of Louisiana. And as a patriotic American, I want President Trump's policies to succeed in making America and Americans more secure, more prosperous, healthier. But if there's someone that is not vaccinated because of policies or attitudes you bring to the department, and there's another 18-year-old who dies of a vaccine-preventable disease, helicoptered away, God forbid dies, it'll be blown up in the press. The greatest tragedy will be her death, but I can also tell you an associated tragedy, well, that will cast a shadow over President Trump's legacy, which I want to be the absolute best legacy it can be me.
(02:55:29)
So that's my dilemma, man. And you may be hearing from you over the weekend. You may be hearing from me over the weekend. I, once again, thank you for your time, and I yield to my ranking member.
Senator Sanders (02:55:44):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you very much for your job today in conducting this very, very important hearing. Let me reiterate my concerns. Every person on this panel, and I would hope everybody in America, wants to make us the healthiest country on earth. And I applaud Mr. Kennedy for raising the issues and talking about some very important truths.
(02:56:18)
But what I am not hearing from him are some very specific policy issues that we absolutely need if we're going to make America healthy. It is unquestionable that when 68,000 Americans die because they can't afford to go to a doctor, he got to deal with that. And I have not heard one word about the need for universal healthcare that exists in every country on earth. When one out of four people can't afford prescription drugs because the pharmaceutical industry is ripping us off and charging us 10 times more, in some cases, than the people in other countries. I have not heard the definitive answer I need that we're not going to pay the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs.
(02:57:07)
And one of the points I think that Mr. Kennedy made, which is right, healthcare is not just medical care. It's a lot more. Talk about the food industry. We have held a hearing, Senator Cassidy and I held a hearing a couple of months ago where we made the point that the food industry is in fact poisoning our kids with addictive food that is leading to obesity, diabetes, heart conditions, et cetera. And I hope, I hope that our Congress and the White House will have the courage to take on a very powerful food industry and demand that the products that they sell our kids are in fact healthy and non-addictive. In many ways what the food industry is doing today is what the tobacco industry did 50 or 60 years ago.
(02:57:58)
And we talk about making America healthy today. Again, it's not just doctor care, medical care. We have millions of people working for starvation wages. You cannot be healthy if you're working 50 or 60 hours a week and you can't afford the rent that your landlord is charging you. Stress kills. Stress makes us sick.
(02:58:21)
So, Mr. Chairman, let me just say this. I think the issues that have been raised in this hearing today are of enormous importance. I look forward to working with you and other members of this committee to make sure that we develop the policies that have the courage to take on very powerful and wealthy special interests, so in fact, that we can make America healthy. Thank you.
Senator Cassidy (02:58:47):
This concludes our hearing. For any Senators who wish to ask additional questions, questions for the record will be due tomorrow on Friday, January 31st at 5:00 PM.