New polling shows Republicans hold an overwhelmingly positive view of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and most approve of President-elect Donald Trump's decision to put Kennedy in the incoming administration.
Trump defended his nomination of Robert F. Kennedy for health secretary and offered up debunked data linking vaccines and autism in a new speech.
Mr. Trump has defended Mr. Kennedy, which isn't surprising, given the president-elect's disdain for expertise. In that vein, who better to lead the 80,000 scientists, researchers, doctors and other officials who protect America's public health than a man who embodies the antithesis of a reasoned scientific approach?
Cheryl Hines has a theory on why her husband Robert F. Kennedy Jr. decided to dine on McDonald's with President-elect Donald Trump earlier this year — he had no choice! While speaking with a pap on Wednesday, December 18, during an outing in Beverly ...
Kash Patel speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally at the Findlay
The president-elect and his choice to run the Department of Health and Human Services dined with pharmaceutical executives last week.
President-elect Trump encouraged Republicans in Texas to consider a primary challenge to Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) on Thursday after he blamed the congressman for “getting in the way” of a push to raise the debt ceiling as part of government funding talks. “The very unpopular ‘Congressman’ from Texas, Chip Roy, is getting in the way,…
Mr. Kennedy is beginning his meetings with Republican senators to build support for his confirmation, which could be imperiled by his anti-vaccine advocacy.
Although Kennedy has supported legal abortion for his entire public career, he told pro-life senators in closed-door meetings that he would oppose taxpayer funds for abortion domestically and abroad and restore conscience protections.
He is expected to meet this week with more than 20 senators, many of them receptive to his case to run the Health and Human Services Department.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald Trump's choice to leading the Health and Human Services Department, said Monday he's "all for the polio vaccine" in a brief interview with ABC News, though he did not respond to questions on issues like school vaccine mandates.
New AP-NORC polling shows that Republicans hold an overwhelmingly positive view of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., but most Democrats disapprove of President-elect Donald Trump's picking him to be the nation's top health official.