📰 NEW YORK POST

Senate Finance Committee advances RFK Jr. nomination for HHS secretary

The Senate Finance Committee voted Tuesday to advance the nomination of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) after a pair of contentious hearings last week.

Kennedy, 71, is expected to be considered by the full Senate sometime next week.

An early whip count showed that President Trump’s pick to helm HHS had nabbed the support of all 14 Finance Committee Republicans, sources previously told The Post, after facing sharp questions from Democrats about his past claims claims about the safety and efficacy of vaccines.

A longtime environmental lawyer, Kennedy slipped up a few times when trying to explain the differences between key benefit programs like Medicare and Medicaid but mostly stuck to his message that Trump, 78, had nominated him to “Make America Healthy Again” by ending the chronic disease epidemic and cleaning up the US food supply.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. answered questions from the Senate Finance committee for more than four hours last week. Jack Gruber-USA TODAY

Kennedy also had to defend an onslaught of outlandish claims he had made in the past about the virus causing COVID-19 being “ethnically targeted” against black and Caucasian people, about Lyme disease being a militarily-engineered bioweapon and his statement last year that he would not “take sides on 9/11.”

The Kennedy scion was vetted by both the Finance and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committees — but will only receive a vote in the former.


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