The NPR Politics Podcast - RFK Jr. Confirmation Hearing
Episode Date: January 29, 2025During his confirmation hearing Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President Trump's pick to run Health and Human Services, defended his stances on vaccines and abortion access.This episode: White House correspon...dent Deepa Shivaram, political correspondent Susan Davis, and health policy correspondent Selena Simmons-Duffin.The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs & Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Colin from Orlando, Florida.
Now I'm removing the plant coverings I draped over our tomatoes in the garden from last night's freeze warning.
This podcast was recorded at 12 44 p.m. on Wednesday, January 29th, 2025.
Things may have changed by the time you hear it, but hopefully our family will be able to enjoy ripe tomatoes in February.
Okay, here's the show.
I heard some parts of Florida got like 10 inches of snow. Really?
Not good for the tomatoes, I can tell you that.
Which is, yeah, nuts and like praying for those tomatoes because that's some good stuff.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Deepa Sivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Susan Davis.
I cover politics.
And friend of the podcast, Selena Simmons-Duffin, who covers health policy for NPR, joins us
today.
Hey, Selena.
Hi.
Okay.
So the highly anticipated confirmation hearing for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. got started today
on Capitol Hill.
Kennedy has been tapped to be President Trump's Health and Human Services Secretary.
President Trump has promised to restore America's global strength and to restore the American dream. But he understands we can't be a strong nation
when our people are so sick.
We should note that Kennedy has a condition
that affects his voice.
And with that, let's get into it.
There's so much to talk about.
Selena, I'm gonna start with you.
Just very basic stuff here.
What is RFK's background?
Well, his background is really
in environmental advocacy and law. So he is an attorney by
training, and for many decades he focused on toxins and the environment. And then a
couple decades ago, he kind of got into the anti-vax space, although he was very clear
today in the hearing that he is not anti-vaccine. Really, he has made his reputation
and his fortune sowing doubts about vaccines, pushing the thoroughly disproven link between
vaccines and autism. So, you know, he had to kind of thread the needle today in describing
how that as his background prepared him to run HHS, which is an enormous agency that
oversees vaccine policy, among many other things.
You know, Kennedy is so interesting. I like that phrase used, thread the needle, because
to me, he's also this unique figure in politics right now who sort of has threaded the needle
between having alliances in very liberal places like Hollywood and also now very conservative
MAGA type spaces where he's a bit of sort of celebrated figure at both
the left and the right at various points of his life. And I think that's part of the
reason why Donald Trump picked him. And don't forget, he was a lifelong Democrat. He became
an independent and then he endorsed Trump in a pretty public display of saying, I will
endorse you if you give me a job in your administration, which he was then delivered. And in his opening
remarks today, he did invoke
the Kennedy family, obviously one of the most famous political families in American history,
invoking both his father, obviously Robert F. Kennedy, and his uncle, former President
John F. Kennedy. But I do also think it's worth noting that several high profile members
of his own family are trying to undermine this nomination. Caroline Kennedy, the daughter
of former president Kennedy, the daughter of former
President Kennedy, released a letter that she sent to senators outlining her opposition
to him, calling him a quote predator and accusing him of any number of sordid and inhumane things
and saying that the Senate should not confirm him. So I think everyone was prepared for
it to be pretty contentious.
Yeah. And we should point out that he also ran for president. And like there was that stint of his political career as well, where there was a lot of family
pushback at that time too.
But given the context of what he's done with his career, Selena, what was his pitch to
why he should have this job?
Yeah.
He really tried to portray himself as an outside the box thinker, somebody with fresh ideas,
who wasn't afraid to stand up to big pharma and big food and all of these big industries, basically that he
would speak truth to power. He emphasized transparency a lot and he also portrayed
himself as somebody who would execute on what President Trump wants. He really
hewed close to President Trump, mentioned his name a lot, and really tried to portray
himself as somebody who was going to come in and, you know,
execute on this vision to reshape health.
No, and that, you know, goes to the point
of how vast HHS is.
Like, we are talking about so many things,
vaccines, like you pointed out.
We're talking about things like abortion.
We're talking about Medicare, Medicaid,
the Affordable Care Act.
There's so much to get into.
And with that, I mean, Sue, this was one of the hearings
that had the potential to be pretty controversial, pretty contentious. As we've been talking
about, he is one of the more high profile picks for Trump's cabinet. And there were
supporters of Kennedy and protesters in the room today. How did you see it unfolding?
What was the reactions from folks in the room, but also from the senators who were questioning Kennedy?
There's been a bit of a curiosity in several of these confirmation hearings for Trump nominees
in which they seem to come with cheering sections, that there's been some public celebrating
and applause. He was also interrupted a couple of times by protesters, but I don't think
that the protesters were overwhelming or derailed in any way. But you're right. I think it
was very clear that Democrats were going to go in and be very contentious towards him on the vaccine issue, which I think has been
very widely documented, his at best contradictory history of supporting or opposing vaccines
and questioning the science around them. One exchange that I think stood out was Massachusetts
Senator Elizabeth Warren, who really went several rounds with him over how he might
personally benefit from his past advocacy.
And I'm asking you to commit right now that you will not take a financial stake in every
one of those lawsuits so that what you do as secretary will also benefit you financially
down the line.
I'll comply with all the ethical guidelines.
That's not the question.
You and I, you have said repeatedly...
You're asking me, Senator, you're asking me not to pursue vaccine...
No, I am not.
My question is not in your...
That's exactly what you're doing.
Look, no one should be fooled here.
As Secretary of HHS, Robert Kennedy will have the power to undercut vaccines
and vaccine manufacturing across our country.
And for all of his talk about follow the science and his promise
that he won't interfere with those of us who want
to vaccinate his kids, the bottom line is the same.
Kennedy can kill off access to vaccines and make millions
of dollars while he does it.
Kids might die, but Robert Kennedy can keep cashing in.
So going into this hearing, one big question mark was, would there be questions that came out in
the financial and ethical disclosures that were made public last week? Those disclosures did show
that he has made many millions of dollars in lawsuits
against drug makers. And this job oversees drug makers. So that's a big, big question
mark. But in particular, in the ethics disclosure, he said he would not divest himself from ongoing
lawsuits against Merck for its HPV vaccine that prevents cervical cancer. And so Senator Warren was really trying to dig into like,
would he commit there in the hearing to not profit
off of a lawsuit against a drug maker that he's regulating?
And he would not affirmatively answer that he would divest.
One other thing I wanna get into about something
that Kennedy said in that exchange,
and I want both of you to hop in here,
because he said, I support vaccines,
I will support the childhood schedule. The only thing I want is good science.
Yeah. So implicitly, he's saying the science that has been done is not good. He's disparaging
the federal regulators and the scientists who have worked to create these products and
to recommend them on these schedules to try to make the population
healthier.
I also think some Republicans on the committee hearing tried to help him do defense in that
regard. There was kind of a telling exchange between Kennedy and Tom Tillis, who's a Republican
senator from North Carolina, where he just says to him, are you a conspiracy theorist?
Because that is something that Kennedy has been accused of in the course of his career.
And Kennedy said something to the effect of like, people just don't want me asking the tough
questions. And look, this as Selena knows, as we all know, like this sense that you could no longer
trust science, I think is something that was very much born out of the cultural divisions of the
COVID pandemic. But I would say on the right in particular, I think it has fueled an extreme
skepticism in the scientific agencies of the
United States government. And that is the sort of broader political climate that I think
is really important to understanding why someone who questions those entities would be very
appealing to the Trump administration.
All right. We're going to take a quick break and we'll be back in a moment. And we're
back. RFK Jr. has gotten some pushback from Republicans on his prior stances in support of abortion
rights, but that also came up from Democrats today.
Here's New Hampshire Senator Maggie Hassan.
So, Mr. Kennedy, I'm confused.
You have clearly stated in the past that bodily autonomy is one of your core values.
The question is, do you stand for that value or not?
When was it that you decided to sell out the values you've had your whole life in order
to be given power by President Trump?
Let's get into that.
So there are a couple things that we were talking about earlier, you know, where Kennedy
has shifted, changed, flip-flopped on some of his stances.
So Sue, where exactly does Kennedy stand on abortion?
I thought this was some of the most interesting exchanges today because Kennedy, for most
of his life and career, has supported abortion rights.
And it's not even entirely clear to me that he no longer supports abortion rights.
He just emphatically and repeatedly kept making the point that he supports Donald Trump's
position on abortion rights.
And this is how he responded in that exchange with Hassan. Senator, I agree with President Trump that every abortion is a tragedy. And that's really
the most important thing is what I think he was signaling mainly to the Republican senators here
because they're the votes that really matter is that he's not going to do anything to contradict
whatever the Trump White House position is going to be on abortion policies and frankly, we don't entirely know where Donald Trump is going to maneuver in that space over the next four years.
Yeah, I would agree with that. In terms of domestically, what moves the Trump administration is going to make to restrict access to abortion is a really big question. and who is in charge at HHS plays pretty directly into what those policies look
like and what restrictions might look like around the country. There's a lot of
different levers that could be pulled from HHS that could affect abortion
access nationally. And one thing I think that we're all watching for is that he
was asked some questions about Mepha Prystone, which is the abortion
inducing drug that can currently be delivered in the mail. And there has been certainly been pushes among conservatives
to try to restrict mail access to the drug, particularly in states that have essentially
outlawed abortion access. And there's going to be a lot of pressure on the Trump administration
to do that, to do it through rulemaking authority. And to Selena's point, if they were to attempt
that, Kennedy would be a really central figure in a decision like that.
Today, the way I heard him,
he did not seem to indicate that that was an issue
in which he would seek to oppose the president's wishes.
Selena, I wanna shift for just a second
because the Affordable Care Act was also brought up today.
Kennedy said that this is something
that isn't working for Americans.
He specifically said a majority of Americans
don't want the Affordable Care Act and prefer private insurance. That's not true, though.
There were a couple really confusing exchanges when it comes to health policy.
The Affordable Care Act marketplaces are private insurance. Like, that's what you're buying when
you go to the Obamacare, healthcare.gov, like those marketplaces. That's what that is.
And favorability has never been
higher for the Affordable Care Act. This is a very well-established law. The marketplaces
now have 24 million people enrolled in them. It doubled in the four years of the Biden
administration. There are lots of options. Plans are affordable. People are happy with
the Affordable Care character right now. He also suggested at times that Medicaid is also not a popular program and that
is also exponentially not true. Medicaid is very popular amongst Democrats,
Republicans, and independents. It is the program that serves the poor, it is the
program that delivers a whole heck of a lot of babies in this country, and as
every family with a special needs kid knows, Medicaid
covers much of the care and costs associated with kids that need extra medical help. So I think
Medicaid is one of those third rails of American politics where you start suggesting it needs to
be overhauled or that it's not very popular. A lot of Americans ears perk up. And I think that
that is one of the most interesting and politically perilous paths ahead for the Republican Party in which they openly discuss cutting programs
like Medicaid in order to pay for things like tax cuts. And I think this is particularly
interesting now as the Republican Party increasingly, the growth within the party is coming from
people who are much more reliant on government programs, who have a much more direct connection
to a lot of these social safety net programs and they're still operating with a sort
of old school conservative ethos that they all need to be sort of reduced down and paired
back and that it runs kind of counter to who their party is and who they represent now.
Yeah. I want to try to like patch together like some of the takeaways we've all had
from watching this hearing today and that's really kind of a hard task but I'm going
to try. And I feel like one of the things is that, you know, as we've all had from watching this hearing today. And that's really kind of a hard task, but I'm gonna try. And I feel like one of the things is that,
as we've pointed out over and over again,
this is such a vast and huge department that oversees
so much of what touches our healthcare,
some things that don't even really directly
touch our healthcare.
But something that Kennedy kept talking about
was people are not healthy,
kids are not healthy in this country.
He kept talking about a lot of things like SNAP,
things to do with school lunches, so nutrition. But Selena, not all of that would even live under
his purview if he were confirmed.
No, those two programs, SNAP, which used to be known as food stamps and school lunch program,
are under USDA, the US Department of Agriculture, not under HHS. But to your point, HHS, there's
plenty there, like so much. My favorite fun fact
about HHS is that its annual budget is $1.7 trillion, which is the GDP of Australia.
So tiny.
Yeah. It's so big and vast. He mentioned a couple of times, 90,000 people work for HHS.
And just to give people a sense for the work that's happening in the health agencies, people
have heard of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
That's under HHS.
Food and Drug Administration, that's under HHS.
NIH, Basic Science Research.
The NIH is the biggest funder of biomedical research in the world.
That's under HHS.
And it was interesting to me that some of the core issues
he seemed to be passionate about were for programs that he would not have jurisdiction over.
And when he was talking about Medicare, Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, those things that are
very much under HHS. And so, Sue, the big question going forward is does he have enough votes to get
confirmed? I mean, it certainly seems more likely than not. The questioning from Republicans today
was pretty friendly. I think the handful of Republican senators, people are watching to
see how they vote, are people like Bill Cassidy. He's a Republican from Louisiana. He was one
of the Republicans who voted to impeach Donald Trump. He's been a bit of an independent-minded
senator. He's also a doctor and deeply aware of all of those jurisdictions of HHS that matter. Maybe the senators that voted
against Pete Hagseth's defense nomination, people like Mitch McConnell, Susan Collins
of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. But the politics right now just don't really lend
itself to handing Trump a big defeat within the party. Like he's popular,
there's a lot of energy around it. I think the bigger question too was also, would any
Democrats support RFK Jr. Because look, like a lot of the advocacy of his lifetime did
align with a lot of values of the Democratic Party, particularly on environmental issues.
I didn't hear that today. I think one of the senators, Bernie Sanders, independent
from Vermont, who was aligned with RFK Jr. in the past on certain issues, he seemed very skeptical.
He did not sound like a yes vote to me today. So I think it's likely he is confirmed. It
seems almost certainly to be on a likely party line vote. His performance, just speaking
strictly through the political lens, not the policy one, he did a very good job today.
He was pugnacious and direct with Democrats.
He responded very well with Republicans. And the bottom line, this game is not about winning
over the opposition party. It's about keeping Republicans unified behind you. And I think
he probably succeeded in that today.
All right, we're going to leave it there for today. Selena, thanks so much for joining
us.
Thanks for having me.
I'm Deva Shivram. I cover the White House.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.