The Senate is poised to make “an absolute life-or-death decision” in confirming Kennedy as HHS secretary, warned Gov. Josh Green, who is also a physician.
WASHINGTON >> Even as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, returned to Capitol Hill on Wednesday to meet with top Senate committee leaders,
Democrats, including U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz, blame Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for contributing to a deadly measles outbreak in Samoa in 2019.
Members of two Senate committees will have a lot of ground to cover at Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s confirmation hearing to be Health and Human Services secretary (which has yet to be scheduled ). They should devote most of their time probing how his long history of anti-vaccine advocacy will impact infectious disease control.
U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz took to the Senate floor this morning to oppose the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., for Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s views on vaccines and abortion rights are raising alarms across the political spectrum, as he's one of the more controversial picks for the president-elect's Cabinet.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reported income from a pension with his former employer, the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Sen. John Cornyn on Thursday met with Robert F. Kennedy and said he would support Kennedy's confirmation as HHS secretary.
Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz is denouncing President Trump’s pick for secretary of the Health and Human Services Department. Democrats blame Robert F. Kennedy Junior for contributing to a deadly measles outbreak in Samoa in 2019.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s choice to lead HHS, is back on Capitol Hill today to pitch himself to Senate Democrats to lead the sprawling agency.
More than 15,000 doctors have signed a letter urging senators to vote against confirming Robert ... Josh Green, a physician, wrote in The New York Times that vaccine misinformation spread by ...
Two pillars of our civil society threaten to collapse just when we need them most: cohesive public health services and effective emergency management.