Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said vaccines are not safe. His support for abortion access has made conservatives uncomfortable.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., on the eve of his Senate hearing. By Adam Nagourney and Rebecca Davis O’Brien For decades, Caroline Kennedy kept silent. Ms. Kennedy, 67, the only surviving child of ...
“Bobby! Bobby!” Supporters decked out in MAHA (“Make America Healthy Again”) pins and hats chanted this as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President Donald Trump’s nominee for health secretary, entered a ...
Kennedy, tapped by Trump to lead HHS, struggled to ease concerns held by on-the-fence GOP senators over his long history of vaccine skepticism.
The man who hopes to be President Donald Trump’s health secretary said he needed to see data showing vaccines are safe, but when an influential Republican senator did so, he dismissed it.
RFK Jr. is a high-profile face of vaccine hesitancy, but people's vaccine concerns fall on a much broader spectrum.
With little fanfare, the Biden administration stacked a critical committee that helps set U.S. vaccination policy with new ...
Contentious hearings to consider Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services this week have ...