President Donald J. Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has cleared the U.S. Senate 52-48 in a final vote of confirmation. The vote, largely along partisan lines, makes Kennedy Jr. the 27th individual to serve as the Secretary of Health of Human Services since the cabinet-level position was created as part of the former Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in 1953 under the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Kennedy Jr. is a key member of President Trump’s push to “Make America Healthy Again.” A scion of the Kennedy clan, nephew of the late President John F. Kennedy and son of the late Robert F. Kennedy Sr., RFK Jr. is a staunch advocate for healthy foods and scientific transparency in public health.
Multinational pharmaceutical corporations see him as a major threat to their business model and monopoly on public health. Early opposition to his nomination from a handful of establishment Senate Republicans collapsed over the last week following two contentious Senate confirmation hearings.
During his confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, Kennedy Jr. made a firm pledge that after leaving the President’s cabinet, he would not accept payment or job with the pharmaceutical, medical device, or hospital industries—a promise no other HHS Secretary has made. Additionally, Kennedy Jr. has committed to pushing President Trump’s plan to end late-term abortion.
Most consequential, however, is Kennedy Jr.’s promise to prioritize combating addiction as HHS Secretary. Illicit drugs, which flooded the U.S. under former President Joe Biden, have sparked an epidemic in addiction and substance abuse. Kenendy Jr., himself a heroin addict for 14 years, stressed his 42 years in recovery during his confirmation hearings and emphasized that the issue is one of the most important tasks he believes the department faces.