The Megyn Kelly Show - Docs Explore Allergy Surge, Bill Gates Addresses Epstein Ties, Crockett Surges in TX: AM Update 2/26
Episode Date: February 26, 2026FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary convenes top researchers to confront the surge in food allergies, warning past medical advice to avoid allergens helped fuel today’s crisis - and then joins AM Upda...te for an exclusive interview. Dr. Casey Means tells senators America is the world’s most chronically ill wealthy nation, arguing public health must target root causes, not just treatment at her confirmation hearing for Surgeon General. Bill Gates admits his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was a “huge mistake,” saying he saw nothing illegal but acknowledging the association cast a shadow over his foundation. New polling shows Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett surging ahead in the Texas Democrat Senate primary as turnout rises and the race enters its final days. PureTalk: Tired of big wireless prices? Switch to PureTalk for unlimited talk and text for $25/month—dial #250 and say MEGYN KELLY for 50% off your first month. Herald Group: Learn more at https://GuardYourCard.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Good morning, everyone. I'm Emily Cheshinsky, host of After Party and the Megan Kelly wrap-up show on SiriusXM Channel 111.
It's Thursday, February 26th, 20206. And this is your AM update.
We made a terrible, tragic mistake as a medical profession, giving parents the wrong recommendation to avoid peanut and other allergens until a child turns three years of age.
FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty McCarray bringing together leading researchers and physicians to examine.
what's driving the surge in food allergies and how to stop it.
We are now the most chronically ill, high-income nation in the world.
This public health crisis is touching every American family.
Dr. Casey Means facing senators in her confirmation hearing to become the next surgeon general.
Bill Gates acknowledging his ties to Jeffrey Epstein were a huge mistake while saying he never
witnessed anything illegal.
And new poll numbers show Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett surging in the race for the
Democrat Senate nomination in Texas. All that and more coming up in just a moment on your AM update.
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peer talk. The Trump administration directing resources toward uncovering the root causes of chronic
health problems affecting millions of Americans, including the sharp rise in food allergies,
now impacting millions of families nationwide. Food allergies today,
affecting roughly one in 10 adults and one in 13 children,
reshaping daily life for parents, schools, and communities,
from allergen-free classrooms to the growing financial burden of life-saving medications like EpiPens.
Yesterday, FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty McCarray convening a high-level expert panel on food allergies,
bringing together leading researchers and physicians to examine what's driving the surge and how to stop it.
If you haven't noticed, society over the last 25 years has transformed.
Kids with a peanut or food allergy now sit at their own table,
or they can or cannot go into certain rooms or participate in certain activities in society.
Food and peanut allergies are real.
They need to be taken seriously.
What happened?
When we were kids, hardly anyone had a peanut or food allergy.
Something happened.
and look at the result.
Kids can't go out for ice cream, their entire childhood for fear that the scooper has been
cross-contaminated and not rinsed appropriately after being used in a nut-based flavor.
Schools and families have been burdened by the cost of having an epipen at all times everywhere
they go.
Peanut allergies in particular becoming the scourge of many elementary schools,
with Dr. McCarrie pointing to peasant.
medical guidance that made the problem worse.
We made a terrible, tragic mistake as a medical profession.
Giving parents the wrong recommendation to avoid peanut and other allergens until a child turns
three years of age, ignoring a basic principle in immunology known as oral tolerance, whereby
the body's developing immune system benefits from exposures to allergens as early as
five, six, seven months of age. And we now know from good research published by some of the experts
here that that helps significantly reduce peanut allergies and other food allergies later in life.
Our job today is not to look back, it's to look ahead, to talk about prevention, best practices,
the latest science and new therapeutics that can help the kids suffering from these allergies.
Dr. Gideon Lack and Dr. Rucci Gupta, two of the nation's leading allergy experts, noting today's medical guidance returns to an earlier principle, introducing potential allergens early rather than avoiding them.
Babies require early exposure through the gastrointestinal tract to achieve tolerance.
And throughout history and throughout millennia, that's what parents did with their children.
They gave them the foods that they ate.
decades now, we've been managing prevention and treatment with avoidance. And I would just like to
point out that the pedium has shifted now where we are exposing early to prevent and diagnose
early and treat early. It is challenging for parents to introduce multiple foods. And we want to be
careful about medicalizing food allergy in early infants when life is already so complicated,
raising a baby. So I think currently the best way to put it is if your family is eating a food
in their diet, it's part of your family food, then introduce it to your baby.
We spoke to Commissioner McCarrie about the expert panel. He tells us a diet filled with
ultra-processed foods is just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to
reducing the rate of food allergies.
We're fairly certain that there is a link between what a child consumes and these many
diseases that have expanded in the last 20 years.
And if you look at one common thread, it's the fact that the diet of children, starting in
our generation, has become highly ultra-processed with new chemicals and exposures that were
never seen before in human history.
And so this is where we need to put research dollars.
So we want to increase education.
We want people to be more aware.
We want them to know best practices.
We want them to know where the data is solid and where we are just winging it as a medical profession.
And we want there to be no new therapeutics in this field to help those who are suffering right now with the consequences of peanut and food allergies.
Dr. McCarray tells us the longstanding medical consensus that urged families to avoid allergens,
guidance many now believe did more harm than good is an example of a broader pattern in medicine.
It's a hazard of group think, and we've seen it not just with peanut allergy recommendations being wrong,
but also with the dogma that opioids were not addictive. We got that wrong for 20 years.
The dogma that saturated fat is what kills you and causes heart disease. We got that wrong for 50 years.
It was the basis of the old food pyramid that we just recently rewrote in this administration.
And there have been other dogmas.
You saw it during the COVID pandemic that a kid had to avoid school for nearly two years
or wear a cloth mask at the age of two years of age for years.
COVID boosters and young healthy children.
So we have to be aware that we are prone to medical group think today,
just as we had been in the past.
Dr. McCarrie describing how the Trump administration is attempting to break that pattern.
We're changing the funding at the National Institutes of Health.
We're changing it from the traditional treatment-only focus to also studying the root causes.
It's been kind of an open secret that as we've transformed the U.S. food supply to be high in junk food and chemicalized foods,
that we've also ushered in an epidemic of chronic diseases.
So this is where we can get a lot of bang for our buck in investing in research ideas.
And I personally like the ideas that are sometimes not very popular, the ideas that only get one vote in the scientific selection committee, the grants that come through.
And the old guard establishment thinks it's not a good idea, but one or two researchers on the team.
Maybe younger scientists think there may be something there.
We need fresh new ideas when it comes to research because we've got to try new approaches.
And in fact, most great scientific discoveries have come from big ideas from a fresh perspective.
Meanwhile, Dr. Casey Means facing senators yesterday in her confirmation hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee to become the next Surgeon General.
The hearing originally scheduled for October, but postponed after Means' work.
went into labor the morning she was set to testify. Means is the sister of top RFK junior
advisor, Callie Means. A 2009 graduate of Stanford University means later earning her MD from Stanford
University School of Medicine, on track to become a highly specialized surgeon before leaving
her residency in her fifth year. Means since rededicating her career around combating the
nation's chronic disease epidemic, arguing the medical establishment focuses too heavily on treatment
and not enough on root causes, means here delivering her opening statement.
We are now the most chronically ill, high-income nation in the world.
We live shorter, sicker lives than peer high-income nations.
We spend trillions annually on reactive sick care.
Nearly 150 million Americans are on federal health care programs,
and we spend $50 billion per year on research.
Yet outcomes are worsening and disparities are widening.
This public health crisis is touching every American family.
It is robbing our children of possibility, our workforce of productivity, and our nation
of security.
Public health leaders must address the evidence-based, modifiable drivers of chronic
diseases, which include ultra-processed foods, industrial chemical exposure, lack of physical
activity, chronic stress and loneliness, and over-medicalization.
Democrat Senator Patty Murray of Washington, questioning means on
past comments made about birth control. You called birth control pills, and I'm going to quote,
a disrespect of life. And you said Americans, quote, use birth control pills like candy.
Should women trust the FDA, which approved all 18 methods of birth control, or should they
trust your statement that there are horrifying health risks to birth control? I absolutely believe
these medications should be accessible to all women. And also, all medications,
have risks and benefits. And some of the horrifying side effects of birth control that I have mentioned
include blood clots and stroke risk in women who have clotting disorders, who are smokers.
I'm very careful with my words. And when I say those comments, which are taken out of
comment out of context, I'm speaking about particular women that can be hurt if there is not informed
consent about their medical history. I want those women. And I know you do too to be able to
have a thorough conversation with their doctor and know whether they are at higher risk for
side effects. Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, a Republican and medical doctor asking means
about her beliefs on the potential link between vaccines and autism. Do you believe that vaccines,
whether individually or collectively, contribute to autism? The reality is that we have an autism
crisis that is increasing and this is devastating to many families and we do not know as a medical
community what causes autism. The administration,
has just committed a huge amount of funding to look at the exosome of all environmental factors
that could be contributing to autism. And until we have a clear understanding of why kids are
developing this at higher rates, I think we should not leave any stones unturned.
There's been a lot of evidence showing that they're not implicated. Do you not accept that evidence?
I do accept that evidence. I also think that science has never settled.
FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty McCarrie tells us Casey Means is exactly the kind of thinker this
administration needs. She's one who can speak both as a surgical subspecialist and as a holistic
primary care physician who talks about food and the importance of natural sunlight and the
types of grains that we eat. This is the type of expertise that is badly lacking in modern education.
People who are in the medical field often have to seek it out on their own. And she is one of the
great role models of physicians who has sought out that information, become an expert in much of it,
and is leading the charge on the importance of food and healthy living.
Coming up, Bill Gates apologizing for his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, calling the relationship a huge mistake.
New polling indicates Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett surging in the Democrat primary for U.S. Senate in Texas.
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Bill Gates apologizing to staff at the Gates Foundation on Tuesday for what he called a, quote, huge mistake in associating with convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, acknowledging,
the relationship cast a cloud over the foundation, according to the Wall Street Journal's
exclusive reporting. Speaking at a town hall, Gates admitted to meeting Epstein multiple times
between 2011 and 2014, years after Epstein was convicted of sex crimes involving a minor.
Gates saying he was aware Epstein faced legal trouble, including some, quote, 18-month thing,
limiting Epstein's travel, but did not properly investigate his background, and continued
associating with him even after then-wife Melinda Ferinch Gates in 2013 raised concerns.
From Gates, quote, knowing what I know now makes it, you know, a hundred times worse in terms
of not only his crimes in the past, but now it's clear there was ongoing bad behavior.
Gates confirming he flew with Epstein on a private jet to multiple locations, though saying
he never stayed overnight and he never visited Epstein's Island. The renewed scrutiny coming
as newly released DOJ documents include emails showing Epstein referencing Gates'
alleged extramarital affairs and suggesting he could expose them in a dispute involving one of Gates's
former science advisors. Gates acknowledging during the town hall that he had two affairs with Russian women,
one a bridge player he met around 2010, the other a nuclear physicist linked to one of his companies,
but insisting, quote, I did nothing illicit, I saw nothing illicit. Gates saying photos in the Epstein
files showing him with redacted women were of Epstein's assistance after meeting.
taken at Epstein's request.
The Microsoft founder insisting, quote,
to be clear, I never spent any time with victims,
the women around him.
Gates spokesperson previously denying other allegations
stemming from the newly released files,
including claims that Gates requested help from Epstein
in secretly slipping wife, Melinda,
STI medication, quote,
absurd and completely false.
With a Democrat primary for U.S. Senate in Texas
just five days away,
a new poll shows Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett holding a double-digit lead over state representative James Talleyco.
Crocett, known for her combative style and vibrant clashes on Capitol Hill.
If someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody's bleached blind, bad-built, butch body,
that would not be engaging in personalities, correct?
She's facing off against Talariko, leaning into what he calls, quote, joyful politics,
often invoking his background as a Presbyterian minister in training.
Being a Christian is about loving thy neighbor, not bullying LGBTQ people.
According to the University of Texas's Texas Politics Project survey,
conducted among likely Democrat primary voters,
Crockett leads 56% to Tala Rico's 44%.
The poll fielded just before early voting began last week.
Turned out so far reportedly surging compared to past Texas Democrat primaries.
but the top line only telling part of the story. In the cross tabs, Tala Rico performing far better
with independents who say they plan to vote in the Democrat primary, leading Crockett by 20 points,
60 to 40. Within the core Democratic electorate, however, Crockett maintains the advantage,
57% to 43%. Crocett's strongest support coming from black voters, where she leads by an overwhelming
margin, 87% to 12%. Calerico doing slightly better among whites, edgyzegrocuting,
out Crockett 53 to 47. CNN speaking to one white early voter who explained her decision to back
Talleyico. So yes, we need a fighter. And I was so ready to vote for Jasmine Crockett because I love
her. But I voted for Talleyco because we need somebody who can win. That clip quickly going
viral online, with critics arguing it reveals uncomfortable tension among Democrats about their
views on race and electability. Back in the cross tabs, Crockett leading among women by 20 points,
60 to 40. Among men, the race is essentially even 51 Crockett to Talleyco's 49, Tala Rico
dominating among younger voters, winning 73% of 18 to 29-year-olds compared to Crockett's 27%. In the real
clear polling average, Crocett now leading by three points, with the last three surveys,
all showing momentum in her direction. On the Republican side in the same University of Texas poll,
among likely GOP primary voters, the race is far tighter. Attorney General Ken Paxton holding a narrow
lead at 36%. Incumbent Senator John Cornyn closed behind at 34, Congressman Wesley Hunt at 26. Among
independents who say they plan to vote in the Republican primary, Paxton expanded.
his advantage, pulling 44% support compared to Cornyn's 27 and Hunt's 20. In the real clear polling
average, Paxton leading by 2.7 points coming out ahead in the last four surveys, including one that
had him ahead by seven. Election day set for March 3rd. If a candidate fails to secure at least
50% of the vote, the top two candidates go on to a runoff election set for May 26th.
That'll do it for your AM update. I'm Emily Jashinsky, host of After Party,
Watch the Megan Kelly Show live on SiriusXM's The Megan Kelly Channel 111 at noon east on YouTube.com slash Megan Kelly and on all podcast platforms.
