RFK Jr.’s Cabinet Position Below is a list of the damage he has done in only 6 months of service.
On February 13, 2025, President Trump signed the nomination for RFK Jr. as the 26th HHS Secretary, and he was confirmed by the Senate by a narrow 52–48 vote
Major Actions Since Taking Office
1. Slashed ~10,000 HHS jobs
A department-wide restructuring reduced approximately 10,000 positions across the FDA, CDC, NIH, and other agencies
A federal judge has temporarily blocked parts of this plan in response to a lawsuit by 19 states
2. Dismantled CDC immunization advisory board
In May 2025, he disbanded the 17-member CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing them with individuals aligned with vaccine skepticism
3. Revoked COVID‑19 vaccine recommendation for children & pregnant women
Released a directive removing the blanket CDC recommendation for COVID-19 vaccines in these groups
This has prompted multiple lawsuits from bodies like AAP, ACP, and Infectious Disease Society of America
4. Prompted mass resignations from FDA officials
Tensions over vaccine safety led to the resignation of Dr. Peter Marks, head of the FDA’s Biologics division, along with other senior staff people.com.
5. Established the ‘Make America Healthy Again’ (MAHA) Commission
Chaired a new presidential commission launched simultaneously with his swearing-in, focusing on chronic diseases and reexamining vaccines, psychiatric medications, environmental chemicals, and processed foods .
The MAHA report, issued May 22, featured significant citation errors—some studies even appeared fabricated
6. Promoted food‑related initiatives for Medicaid & Medicare beneficiaries
On July 7, he endorsed Mom’s Meals—claiming they are “without additives”—despite criticism that their offerings are ultraprocessed with high sodium and fats
7. Public approval is low
As of early May 2025, 43% of U.S. adults disapprove of his performance, versus 36% approval; disapproval is especially high (~70%) among Democrats
Why These Moves Spark Controversy
Removing vaccine recommendations and advisory experts undermines established science-based policies, according to public health groups
The job cuts and restructuring are viewed as potentially crippling key agencies (CDC, FDA, NIH) during outbreaks
The MAHA report’s shaky sourcing and alleged AI-created citations cast doubt on its legitimacy
Summary: What He’s Done Since Entering Office up to 7/7/2025
Confirmed as HHS Secretary on Feb 13, 2025
Led major downsizing of HHS staff (~10k cuts)
Dismantled CDC immunization advisory board
Revoked COVID‑19 vaccine guidance for children & pregnant women
Faced multiple lawsuits from leading medical groups
Sparked resignations of senior FDA personnel
Created and chaired the MAHA Commission (report issued May 22)
Public health professionals overwhelmingly disapprove of his direction
Robert F. Kennedy Jr – Part 1
RFK Jr.’s Cabinet Position Below is a list of the damage he has done in only 6 months of service.
On February 13, 2025, President Trump signed the nomination for RFK Jr. as the 26th HHS Secretary, and he was confirmed by the Senate by a narrow 52–48 vote
Major Actions Since Taking Office
1. Slashed ~10,000 HHS jobs
A department-wide restructuring reduced approximately 10,000 positions across the FDA, CDC, NIH, and other agencies
A federal judge has temporarily blocked parts of this plan in response to a lawsuit by 19 states
2. Dismantled CDC immunization advisory board
In May 2025, he disbanded the 17-member CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing them with individuals aligned with vaccine skepticism
3. Revoked COVID‑19 vaccine recommendation for children & pregnant women
Released a directive removing the blanket CDC recommendation for COVID-19 vaccines in these groups
This has prompted multiple lawsuits from bodies like AAP, ACP, and Infectious Disease Society of America
4. Prompted mass resignations from FDA officials
Tensions over vaccine safety led to the resignation of Dr. Peter Marks, head of the FDA’s Biologics division, along with other senior staff people.com.
5. Established the ‘Make America Healthy Again’ (MAHA) Commission
Chaired a new presidential commission launched simultaneously with his swearing-in, focusing on chronic diseases and reexamining vaccines, psychiatric medications, environmental chemicals, and processed foods .
The MAHA report, issued May 22, featured significant citation errors—some studies even appeared fabricated
6. Promoted food‑related initiatives for Medicaid & Medicare beneficiaries
On July 7, he endorsed Mom’s Meals—claiming they are “without additives”—despite criticism that their offerings are ultraprocessed with high sodium and fats
7. Public approval is low
As of early May 2025, 43% of U.S. adults disapprove of his performance, versus 36% approval; disapproval is especially high (~70%) among Democrats
Why These Moves Spark Controversy
Removing vaccine recommendations and advisory experts undermines established science-based policies, according to public health groups
The job cuts and restructuring are viewed as potentially crippling key agencies (CDC, FDA, NIH) during outbreaks
The MAHA report’s shaky sourcing and alleged AI-created citations cast doubt on its legitimacy
Summary: What He’s Done Since Entering Office up to 7/7/2025
Confirmed as HHS Secretary on Feb 13, 2025
Led major downsizing of HHS staff (~10k cuts)
Dismantled CDC immunization advisory board
Revoked COVID‑19 vaccine guidance for children & pregnant women
Faced multiple lawsuits from leading medical groups
Sparked resignations of senior FDA personnel
Created and chaired the MAHA Commission (report issued May 22)
Public health professionals overwhelmingly disapprove of his direction
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