Department Health and Human Services (HHS) nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. refused to say that vaccines do not cause autism at his confirmation hearing on Thursday.
When we face some risk of a bird flu pandemic, do we want to entrust our health to a man who has fought lifesaving vaccines?
In his confirmation hearings, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. said infectious diseases get more funding than chronic diseases.
The man who hopes to be President Donald Trump's health secretary repeatedly asked to see "data" or "science" showing ...
Kennedy often starts this way, insisting that childhood vaccines must cause autism because he didn’t know any severely ...
U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper took a nonconfrontational approach to questioning Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President Donald Trump’s ...
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R), a physician-turned-politician from deep-red Louisiana, has emerged as a central figure in the ...
As secretary of the HHS, Kennedy would oversee major health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tried this week to distance himself from a long history of promoting conspiracy theories and false information as he parried questions from senators who are weighing whether to ...
In his second day of confirmation hearings, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Department of ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s chances of becoming HHS chief likely hinge on one of his more controversial stances: that vaccines ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told senators he would apologize if data shows vaccines don’t cause autism, but he cited a poorly ...