‘Unsettling’ Accounts of HHS Leadership Fuel Calls for RFK Jr. to Resign
Jessica Corbett for Common Dreams

HHS “affects the health of 340 million Americans and
provides healthcare to
40% of the population through Medicare and Medicaid,” explained the
Times, which interviewed a dozen people who have had contact with Kennedy as
secretary and other department employees. His nearly 16-month tenure has
already featured a measles outbreak that killed two children in Texas last year, the
recent hantavirus cases among cruise passengers, and the ongoing Ebola crisis in Africa.
As the newspaper detailed:
Mr. Kennedy has shown little interest in managing the
details of work in his department, according to multiple colleagues. Instead,
they say, he is single-mindedly focused on his top priorities, including food
recommendations and pesticide exposures, and hunting for evidence to support
his long-held beliefs that vaccines are harmful.
The paper highlighted the National Institutes of Health
posts held by acting directors as well as the lack of a surgeon general
(Trump’s picks keep stalling in the GOP-controlled Senate), Food and Drug
Administration commissioner (Marty Makary resigned in May, reportedly over a controversial vape
policy sought by Big Tobacco), and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
chief (Kennedy fired CDC’s Susan Monarez in August after they clashed on vaccine policy, which led other officials
to step down). Courtney Spencer, the secretary’s newly appointed top
spokesperson, claimed that the department is “aggressively recruiting top
talent to fill every remaining vacancy.”
As for Kennedy’s schedule when he’s in Washington, DC, “he
spends much of his day in closed-door meetings, according to those who work
with him, and has little direct engagement with his staff,” the Times reported.
Sources pointed to his history of skipping gatherings with the leaders of the
department’s 13 operating divisions, and some described him as “checked out.”
White
House spokesperson Kush Desai signaled support for the Trump
appointee’s performance so far, telling the Times that the department’s “rapid
and comprehensive response” to the Ebola outbreak proved that “under Secretary
Kennedy’s leadership, HHS continues to safeguard the health and wellness of the
American people.”
However, Kayla Hancock, director of Protect Our Care’s
Public Health Project, said in a statement that “accounts from within the Trump
HHS paint an unsettling picture of RFK Jr.'s absentee leadership amid public
health crises both present and looming.”
“Trump’s health secretary hasn’t stepped foot inside the CDC
in nearly a year despite historic measles outbreaks inflamed by his own anti-vax propaganda,” she stressed, summarizing the
reporting. “When Kennedy does show up to the HHS office—typically for just six
hours a day, which must be nice—he isolates himself from top staff and ignores
lawmaker requests for months on end.”
Hancock noted that “while Kennedy can’t be bothered to involve himself in spiraling health threats like Ebola, he
finds plenty of time to do a shirtless photo spread with Kid Rock, babble for
hours on... his taxpayer-funded vanity podcast on topics like teen sperm, and orchestrate a wasteful department-wide fishing expedition for
any data he can use to breathe life into his debunked anti-vax agenda.”
“Worse, while RFK Jr. is unwilling to do his job, he’s perpetuated a dangerous HHS leadership void for months,
refusing to fill vital roles with actual competent, qualified people who would
pick up his slack,” she added. “Every day that goes by without Secretary
Kennedy’s long overdue resignation is a day American lives are put further in
harm’s way.”
The reporting builds on warnings from experts since Kennedy
took over HHS. Last September, nearly every living former director or acting
director of CDC jointly argued in
the Times that RFK Jr. “is endangering every American’s health.” The following
month, six previous US surgeons general collectively wrote in
The Washington
Post that they had a duty to alert Americans that Kennedy is a danger
to public health. In February, The Lancet, one of the world’s most prestigious
medical journals, marked his
“one year of failure” with an editorial cataloging his broken promises and
“destruction that... might take generations to repair.”
Journalist Seth Abramson responded to the Times article with a new warning:
“Do not doubt that if a major pandemic hits,
millions of Americans will die because of this grotesque man. *Millions*. And
not a single person in America better say that we didn’t know it was coming.
The alarm bells have been ringing nonstop that this sick buffoon is going to
kill innocent people.”