Bulwark Takes - RFK Jr. Lied to Congress. Does ANYONE Care?
Episode Date: June 10, 2025Sam Stein and Jonathan Cohn take on RFK Jr's Wall Street Journal op-ed, his lies to Sen. Cassidy, the administration's thinly veiled crusade against science, and what it means for public health in Ame...rica.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey guys, it's me Sam Stein, managing editor at The Bullwork and I'm joined by Jonathan Cohn,
author of The Breakdown. We are here to talk about the big event, big news from this afternoon.
R.F.K. Jr. in an op-ed that he wrote for the Wall Street Journal has announced that he is going to
be disbanding a critical committee at the CDC which handles the vaccines approval process there.
It's officially the advisory committee on immunization practices.
Basically, he announced that he's going to,
was forced retirement for the 17 members of that committee.
And we presume, I mean, it's obvious
that he will be involved in appointing the 17 new members.
Since Jonathan's way smarter than me,
I'm going to have him explain the significance
of it.
It's true you are.
Don't worry.
I'm comfortable with that.
Let's start with the basic gist.
What is this committee?
What does it do?
How significant is it?
Yeah.
So it's a very significant committee.
It has 19 members, actually.
There were two vacant seats right now.
As you said, it's sort of called the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices.
And that's what it does.
It is a committee of experts and representatives
from different groups who get together.
They look at vaccines as they are coming up
and getting ready to be approved or have been approved
by the FDA.
And their basic job is to say, well,
who should get this vaccine?
And they make recommendations. There are the membership is to say, well, who should get this vaccine? They make recommendations.
There are the membership is actually fairly, there are sort of rules about who are members
so that they want to make sure they have someone who's got background in infectious disease,
someone who's got background in pediatrics, someone background in different fields.
There's also a sort of secondary group of people who are not official members, but sort of advisory members.
They're not voting members.
And we haven't heard anything about them being released
or anything, but who knows.
But they serve staggered terms
and they're volunteers by the way.
None of these people are getting paid for their work on this,
but they are very serious.
They meet three times a year typically. And they are constantly looking at information about new vaccines, about vaccines
they know are going to be coming up for approval because they want to be able to act quickly.
They make recommendations. They'll say, this is who we think should get the vaccine.
It then has to go to the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC, who then
can modify, accept, or reject the recommendation,
at which point it then goes to the Secretary of Health
and Human Services for final approval.
At least that's how it's supposed to work in normal times.
Followers of these videos and readers
or anybody following the news may recall there is-
This is not normal times, man.
Not normal times.
And there's no one, actually there is no CDC director right now, among other things.
But that's like a side issue.
So anyway, that's what we're saying.
I totally forgot about that.
What are we doing here?
OK.
So it's obviously a very significant committee.
Basically, recommendations on vaccines
get translated into what insurers cover
in terms of vaccinations. So absent,
you know, respected scientists on this committee, we have to
worry about who might be appointed. There's no indication yet who he's going to appoint, correct?
There isn't, although he has said the next meeting, and I can't remember if it was June or July,
it's scheduled for, but it's scheduled for the not to exist in future.
Typically you might get some sense by that.
Yeah, well, again, you know,
I was typically you vet people for this for several months.
So that would imply he's already got some people in mind
unless he's just gonna pick them out of a hat.
Although, I mean,
You never know.
You never know. Hey, do you. Although I mean, you never know.
Hey, hey, maybe with some of our readers, they want to ready. No, you want to be on the, you know, send your, you know, qualifications HHS.
I had probably some Twitter follower of Tucker Carlson's on there.
All right.
So let's go through the, let's go through the, um, the journal op-ed because
what stood out to me was the chutzpah here.
Like just pure chutzpah
for why he did this.
And it starts with the very first line.
I'm just going to read it and we're going to react to it.
This is RFK Jr.
The chief vaccine skeptic in America for many years prior to his appointment and confirmation
at his HHI secretary writing about why he did this quote, vaccines have become a divisive
issue in American politics.
I wonder how, but there is one thing all parties can agree on the US faces a crisis of public trust.
Again, we wonder how we got here, whether toward health agencies, pharmaceutical companies or
vaccines themselves, public confidence is waning. Again, who did this? Someone tried to explain this
way by blaming misinformation or anti-science attitudes to do
so, however, ignores a history of conflicts of interest,
persecution of dissidents, dissidents, a lack of curiosity
and skewed science that has plagued the vaccine regulatory
apparatus for decades. Okay, I'm going to stop there. Obviously
my opinions on this are fairly obvious. I think Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is chiefly responsible for why vaccines are a divisive issue and for why people distrust vaccines in this country.
And it's because he believes in conspiracies and quackery and he skews, he himself skews the science.
And yet here he is saying that everything that he's responsible for is just some sort of feature that he's trying to tackle without any culpability ascribed to him at all.
That's just me, Jonathan.
I don't know how you feel about it.
I mean, I'm not going to argue with any of that.
Um, I, I thought, you know, this was a very interesting writing tick.
Vaccines have become a very divisive issue.
I know, right?
I mean, they've become, you know, gosh, what could have happened? You know, they are divisive, you know, and there's, you know, and there's, right? I mean, I've become a, you know, gosh, what could have happened?
You know, they are divisive, you know, and there's, you know, and there's, and then I'd
like how you can see him thinking, hmm, there are going to be some people who are familiar
with my record and familiar with the fact that I've been accused of misinformation.
I better take that on.
And he says, some people say it's misinformation, But no, the real problem here is skewed science.
What's skewed science?
I mean, what he has called skewed science is the sort of repeated findings that vaccines
are safe, that they have been tested.
And remember, this is somebody who is constantly still, even now, he goes on TV, he goes, he'll
say in front of a Senate committee sometimes
He'll say I I'm not gonna question vaccine to me, right?
That's what he said in his confirmation hearings and then you find out he went on some podcast
Or he went on some show and he he you know spouted one of his regular
myths about vaccines that they
Hurt more people than they helped on co, or that they weren't, they aren't being safety tested.
And he just goes down the list.
What about the conflict of interest part?
Because that's really, he goes on in the op-ed
and people can read it for themselves,
it's in the journal, it's gonna be passed on,
you'll probably see it in your feed.
But a lot of this, I mean, a lot of the editorial
sort of hinges on this idea that these people
on this advisory committee are hopelessly compromised because
they have conflicts of interest because they're associated with
pharmaceutical companies in some way, shape or form. Now, I
admit, I have not really dug into it. But I did read some
reporting that emanated from this op ed. And the gist of it
is that no, that's not the case. Like this is a wild
misrepresentation of people
that you are supposed to be vetted prior to appointment
to this committee to make sure that you don't have
those conflicts of interest.
But again, my understanding is very limited on this.
So what is the actual reality here?
Is there massive conflicts of interest at play
that could in theory raise some alarm
that people are just on this committee to make sure that,
I don't know, Eli, these bottom line is buffeted.
No simple answer.
No longer answer.
Look, I take a backseat to nobody and my being critical of the pharmaceutical industry.
There are lots of ways it has too much influence.
You know, there's a very smart sensible case that it has too much influence over the regulatory
process the regulatory drugs and there's a there's a very smart, sensible case that it has too much influence over the regulatory process, the regulatory drugs.
There is a thoughtful, important conversation to have about that.
It doesn't look like this.
The people who do go on the committee, they are vetted.
And also, something else to remember is there are rules for when you vote on a vaccine.
If it's your company, it's a company that you've gotten funding from or your institution, you have to recuse yourself.
And they police that fairly, you know, very seriously.
So there are rules about conflicts.
I mean, do you are there, and I have not gone down in the three hours since this news has
broken and looked at all the sort of 17 members and see who had done what work in the past
for what company.
I'm sure there are several that have done some.
But you know what he's really trying to say here basically is that anybody who's ever,
you know, anybody who does work in this field that has at some point intersected the pharmaceutical
industry is by definition biased.
And this is, you know, given how common this is, I mean, if you're working in this field,
you're, it's a good chance you're going to work with a pharmaceutical company at some point.
This is really his way of sort of tarring the entire mainstream scientific community.
And, and, and so, you know, that's not really,
there's no reason to worry about that in this context for sure.
So we can't disassociate this obviously incredibly important healthcare implications and I get
really anxious actually thinking about where we are a year, two years from now when the
full effect of this decision is felt.
But we can't disassociate it from politics. And the reason I'm bringing this up is that when he
was confirmed, obviously, in contentious hearing and the key
senator involved in the confirmation was the chair of the
help committee, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who, former physician
or doctor, was skeptical, I mean, outwardly skeptical of
RFK, but not to the extent that he was willing to vote him down.
And he got very specific assurances, he said, from RFK Jr. before voting for his confirmation.
I want to play what Cassidy said literally on the floor of the Senate, explaining why he would vote yes for RFK Jr.
Let's play the clip if we have it. He has also committed that he had worked within current vaccine approval and safety monitoring
systems and not established parallel systems.
It confirmed he will maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices recommendations without changes.
But that's just it.
If confirmed, he will maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices, Recommendations Without Changes.
That's funny.
The word recommendations is not necessarily in all the write ups of this, but we heard
it.
He said it.
Cassidy was pressed about this on the Hill today and has disputed the notion that Arfke
Jr. broke his commitment to him on CDC vaccine changes.
He said to Egor Bobik, our former colleague at HuffPost,
R.F.K. promised not to change changing the process, not the committee itself.
I call bullshit. I just call bullshit.
I think Cassidy was misled, maybe willingly or not by R.F.K.
Jr. knows that he was misled and clearly is trying to cover his ass now.
And you can also say one other thing,
Cassidy tweeted out himself from his own account, quote, of course,
now the fear is that the ACIP will be filled up with people who know nothing
about vaccines except suspicion.
I've just spoken with secretary Kennedy and I'll continue to talk to him,
with him to ensure this is not the case.
He's then said he's spoken with Kennedy
at least twice tonight.
I don't know what to, I mean,
my disappointments are evident,
but I feel like Cassidy was just completely duped
and looks like a fool right now
and is watching as our vaccine culture is being taken over
by an outward skeptic, if not conspiracy theorist.
Yeah, I mean, it sure looks like that to me as well.
The politics of this are weird.
Most Americans approve of vaccines.
Most Americans want the vaccines to be available.
Most Americans do not believe the conspiracy theories about vaccines.
Cassidy is a doctor. He has in the past taken stands very strongly in favor of certain public
health positions. Clearly, he knows that I mean, you remember during the confirmation
hearings, he gave Kennedy a pretty hard time and there was some, you know, for a while
there was doubt, was he going to vote? Yes. Or is he going to vote now? I, I, you know, I guess he's, you know, worried about, he's not sure.
I think we haven't heard yet.
If he's running for reelection, he's worried about a right wing primary
challenge and I guess, you know, he doesn't want to be against Trump's appointee.
And I guess that's what it all comes down to.
I mean, that's it, right?
It's like, this is Trump's guy.
Trump made it very clear that he won.
And I think we were, I think, uh, Caputo reported, so they view this as sort of the horseshoe theory of politics, which is Kennedy was bringing
them these kind of liberals that they hadn't had in their coalition and of course then
the Joe Rogan types and you know, and they wanted that.
And to vote Kennedy down, they were worried it was going to be a huge political setback from.
So they put a lot of pressure on Cassidy.
Yeah. Yeah.
So, I mean, the thing that makes that I think is weird about this, I mean,
I, you know, that part all makes sense to me, but he looks so weak.
Right.
And isn't that like, isn't that the worst thing to be in
Maga world to look like a week?
Is it worse to look weak or is it worse to, you know, stand up?
I guess I guess I guess I guess we should ask Vice President Vance, which is which is
worse.
Exactly.
And it's it's like I look at this and I think to myself like you surely Cassidy looks and
says oh my god the damage that's being done.
I mean he knows it's being done.
And is it worth it? Like, is it actually worth it?
Because he could have voted against the guy.
He could have spared this
or spared us from this.
And he and could have fought it out and figured it out.
He had a year and a half to figure it out after that.
Instead, we're left with this.
And frankly, I, you know, I wonder if he got a primary challenge,
if he'd even survived after this.
So I don't know.
I wish to think there's regret.
I wish to think there's regret.
Well, and you know, however, he's thinly he's parsing the language on.
Well, he, you know, Kennedy promised not to change the process.
He didn't say he wouldn't change the members or whatever.
Well, who knows?
But what?
But you know, what this is coming after the decision, you know, on pulling the funding for the, for the Moderna
mRNA vaccine, it comes on the, on the heels of the decision about who should get the COVID vaccine.
I mean, we very clearly going in the direction, doing the sorts of things he very clearly
promised Cassidy and promised the American people he would not do as HHS secretary.
He is very clearly doing those things and Cassidy is letting it happen.
And here's the thing.
It's like we should have expected this.
This is what the RFK junior was not hiding the ball.
Like this is who he is, right?
Like there was no, I don't really know people who are like, ah, maybe it was all for show
when he's HHS secretary, he'll be buttoned up and, you know, a little bit more moderate
and thoughtful in this approach.
This is everyone knew this was going to happen. So you can't
delude yourself into thinking it wasn't although I guess Cassidy
did. Are you surprised at anything RFK Jr has done? Maybe
he's even the speed at which he's done this? Or is this all
sort of what you expected?
No, I am surprised. I mean, I don't know. I'm surprised by so many things
that have happened. I mean, I'm not surprised given everything else that has happened in the
Trump administration. I think I expected, it took me a while to realize, I sort of figured this is
where they were going and where he would be going. I kind of figured it'd be a little more subtle.
I thought it'd be a little more gradual. But again, this seems to be the pattern in the Trump administration.
It's what we saw they did with Doge.
It's what we've, you know, what they're doing with this bill on Capitol Hill.
It is go, go, go.
Just, you know, don't worry about the critics.
Don't worry if you look hypocritical.
Don't worry if you have to lie about it.
Just move as fast as you can.
Overwhelm the political and media, media ecosystem, and just
push through your agenda.
And that's what you're doing.
It is absolutely overwhelming.
It really is.
It's one thing after another, every day you look up and like,
holy shit, wait a second, that just happened.
I mean, this is coming in, and it's like, you know, a
militarization of Los Angeles.
And it's just like, this is a huge deal.
And you can't really
stop and take stock of it on occasion, but we try to.
That's why we have you.
Yeah, well, I don't know.
The number of times a day I look at a story and I think like, why aren't we spending more
time talking about this deal?
And I remember, oh, right, because there's 10 other huge deals.
It's nutty. All right. because there's 10 other huge deals.
It's nutty. All right. Well, we'll keep on this. I know we're
tackling it in tomorrow's morning shots. So people should be on the lookout for that. Eggers got some good
interviews. You got some good interviews for I'm excited to
hear it. And yeah, I mean, we just just keep covering it,
figure out who the people are who he's appointed to this
count committee. Press Cassidy on the Hill, etc out who the people are, who he's appointed to this committee.
Press Cassidy on the Hill, et cetera, et cetera. Cone, thank you for doing this.
I appreciate it.
For unpacking it, it's really helpful.
And thank you guys for watching us.
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