
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. came out swinging at a tense Senate Finance Committee hearing Thursday, defending his overhaul of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and blasting the agency’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kennedy accused the CDC of “catastrophically bad judgment” during the pandemic, arguing its policies shuttered schools, masked children without scientific backing, crippled small businesses, and deepened economic inequality.
“These changes were absolutely necessary to restore the CDC’s role as the gold standard in public health,” Kennedy said. “The U.S. makes up 4.2% of the world’s population but had nearly 20% of COVID deaths. That failure falls on CDC leadership — and those people are leaving.”
Senate Showdown Over Vaccine Policy
The hearing followed Kennedy’s controversial firing of former CDC Director Susan Monarez last month after a dispute over the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). Kennedy argued that pharmaceutical ties had corrupted ACIP and insisted his shakeup “depoliticized” vaccine oversight.
But senators across party lines — including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) — criticized Kennedy’s changes to both ACIP and FDA vaccine approvals, warning that his policies could restrict access to COVID-19 booster shots by removing automatic insurance coverage.
“You are effectively denying people vaccines,” Warren told Kennedy.
Kennedy pushed back: “We’re not going to recommend a product without clinical trial data. I’m not taking vaccines away from people — I’m ensuring integrity in the process.”
Chronic Disease, Obesity, and CDC’s Role
Kennedy also broadened his criticism to include America’s rising rates of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease, arguing the CDC has failed to address chronic illness while focusing too narrowly on pandemic responses.
“Seventy-six percent of our kids now suffer from chronic diseases,” Kennedy charged. “CDC’s job was to prevent this.”
He directly confronted senators, including Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), for “sitting in power for decades” while childhood chronic disease skyrocketed.
Wider HHS Agenda and Controversial Claims
Kennedy highlighted other HHS priorities since his February confirmation: food dye regulation, baby formula oversight, fluoride in water, cutting animal testing, lowering drug prices, and ending gain-of-function research.
But his most controversial remarks came when he alleged the CDC “buried evidence” of a possible link between the MMR vaccine and autism, a claim widely rejected by mainstream science and one that could spark bipartisan backlash.
What’s Next?
Kennedy’s aggressive push to remake CDC and FDA policy has put him on a collision course with both parties in Congress. While supporters say he is restoring “radical transparency” to public health, critics argue his moves risk undermining trust in vaccines and worsening public health challenges.
With battles looming over COVID-19 boosters, chronic disease prevention, and the future role of CDC leadership, Thursday’s hearing may be just the opening round in a larger fight over the direction of U.S. public health policy.
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Check out Frank Pallone getting his ass handed to him by RFK
Every word out of this guy’s mouth trash.
And the fools in NJ reelected him …. again…over 36 years in congress.
How stupid are you people
My family and I still
are affected by the covid vaccine and booster. I have never felt the same as I did prior to getting it. Never again will we get a new vac shot. I wish I didn’t fall for the CDC bull about covid.