Mike Pence urges Senate Republicans to reject RFK jnr for US health secretary

Public alarm mounts among Democrats and in health circles about Robert F Kennedy jnr

Robert F Kennedy Jr, president-elect Donald Trump's pick to head the department of health and human services, taking a selfie during an America First Policy Institute gala hosted by Mr Trump at his residence Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on Thursday, November 14th, 2024. Photograph: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times
Robert F Kennedy Jr, president-elect Donald Trump's pick to head the department of health and human services, taking a selfie during an America First Policy Institute gala hosted by Mr Trump at his residence Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on Thursday, November 14th, 2024. Photograph: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Former US vice-president Mike Pence urged Senate Republicans on Friday to reject Donald Trump’s choice of Robert F Kennedy jnr as health secretary – he cited Mr Kennedy’s support for abortion rights while other critics are most outraged at his stance against vaccines.

Mr Pence’s comments came as public alarm mounted among Democrats and in health circles about Mr Kennedy, while there were bipartisan warnings that another of Mr Trump’s choices, the far-right congressman Matt Gaetz for attorney general, faces “an uphill battle” to win confirmation in the US Senate despite Republicans winning the majority in the upper congressional chamber.

Mr Pence cited his conservative views on abortion for his opposition to Mr Kennedy’s elevation to secretary of health and human services (HHS).

“The Trump-Pence administration was unapologetically pro-life for our four years in office. There are hundreds of decisions made at HHS every day that either lead our nation toward a respect for life or away from it, and HHS under our administration always stood for life,” Mr Pence said in a statement released by his conservative non-profit organisation Advancing American Freedom.

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“I believe the nomination of RFK Jr to serve as secretary of HHS is an abrupt departure from the pro-life record of our administration. and should be deeply concerning to millions of pro-life Americans who have supported the Republican Party and our nominees for decades.”

Prominent medical professionals have joined leading Democrats in speaking out against Mr Kennedy, who has embraced a multitude of debunked health-related conspiracy theories, and whose proposed elevation to the government’s top health job represents “a clear and present danger to the nation’s health” and “a catastrophe”, according to some critics.

“I think this is an extraordinarily bad choice. He does not plan to lean on evidence and rigorous analysis to make decisions but instead to use his own ideas,” Dr Ashish Jha, Covid-19 co-ordinator for the Biden White House and dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health, told CNN.

Dr Richard Besser, former acting director of the powerful US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the network that Kennedy’s views criticising childhood vaccines, including the false claim that they cause autism, were “dangerous”.

“Frankly I find it chilling. He has done so much to undermine the confidence that people have in that incredible intervention,” he said.

Mr Trump has been assembling a cabinet for his second term in office, making announcements this week from his residence in Florida, and on Thursday named Mr Kennedy to lead HHS and its associated agencies. He praised the politician, a former independent presidential candidate and outcast from the Democratic Kennedy political dynasty, at a black-tie gala at Mar-a-Lago on Thursday night.

“If you like health and if you like people that live a long time, it’s the most important position,” he said. Directly addressing Mr Kennedy, who was in the ballroom of Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and private resort club, he added: “We want you to come up with things and ideas, and what you’ve been talking about for a long time.”

Democrats were quick to express outrage. The California representative Robert Garcia called it “f**king insane” and described Mr Kennedy as “a tin foil hat conspiracy theorist”.

The Massachusetts representative Jake Auchincloss promised to “fight back in Washington to protect the integrity” of federal public health agencies if Mr Kennedy is confirmed by the Senate.

“RFK Jr is a conspiracist & quack who threatens the health of Americans. He’s not simply angling for more sunshine & exercise (no one disagrees with that). He seeks to overturn evidence-driven, peer-reviewed research on medicines & more,” Auchincloss posted to X.

Shares in several of the world’s biggest pharmaceutical companies and vaccine manufacturers, including Moderna, AstraZeneca and GSK, plummeted on Friday in reaction to the news.

Mr Kennedy has previously said “there’s no vaccine that is safe and effective” but told NBC in a post-election interview that he “won’t take away anybody’s vaccines”.

Mr Trump on Thursday nominated a vocal ally of his to be interior secretary – Doug Burgum, the Republican North Dakota governor. The role would put him in charge of national parks and public lands, and he has strong links to the fossil fuel industry, where many companies have strong appetites for government permits to drill and mine on federal land.

Republicans will have a majority of at least 53-47 seats in the chamber during the next Congress, but even so two other of Mr Trump’s picks are already receiving bipartisan pushback: Mr Gaetz and the former Democratic congresswoman turned Republican Tulsi Gabbard, named for director of national intelligence. Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton once described her as a “favourite of the Russians”.

Mr Gaetz resigned as a US representative for Florida on Wednesday, in effect suspending the planned release on Friday of a report by the House of Representatives ethics committee into allegations of sexual misconduct, including that he had sex with a 17-year-old girl, which he has denied. His nomination as the nation’s leading law enforcement officer was seen by some as a direct challenge by Mr Trump to the incoming Republican Senate majority to defy his authority.

“For me the message to the administration is simply that Matt Gaetz has a very long, steep hill to get across the finish line and it will require the spending of a lot of capital,” North Dakota’s Republican senator Kevin Cramer told the Washington Post.

“That ethics report is clearly going to become a part of the record.” – Guardian