It’s simple to neglect that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s assault on vaccines—together with, most not too long ago, his gutting of the skilled committee that guides American vaccine coverage—might need been prevented. 4 months in the past, his nomination for well being secretary was in critical jeopardy. The deciding vote gave the impression to be within the fingers of 1 Republican senator: Invoice Cassidy of Louisiana. A doctor who gained prominence by vaccinating low-income children in his residence state, Cassidy was cautious of the longtime vaccine conspiracist. “I’ve been struggling together with your nomination,” he informed Kennedy throughout his affirmation hearings in January.
Then Cassidy caved.
Within the speech he gave on the Senate ground explaining his resolution, Cassidy stated that he’d vote to verify Kennedy solely as a result of he had extracted plenty of concessions from the nominee—chief amongst them that he would protect, “with out adjustments,” the very CDC committee Kennedy overhauled this week. Since then, Cassidy has continued to offer Kennedy the advantage of the doubt. On Monday, after Kennedy dismissed all 17 members of the vaccine advisory committee, Cassidy posted on X that he was working with Kennedy to forestall the open roles from being crammed with “individuals who know nothing about vaccines besides suspicion.”
The senator has failed, undeniably and spectacularly. One new appointee, Robert Malone, has repeatedly unfold misinformation (or what he prefers to name “scientific dissent”) about vaccines. One other appointee, Vicky Pebsworth, is on the board of an anti-vax nonprofit, the Nationwide Vaccine Info Middle. Cassidy might preserve insisting that he’s doing all he can to face up for vaccines. However he already had his huge probability to take action, and he blew it. Now, with the remainder of America, he’s watching the nation’s vaccine future take a nosedive.
Up to now, the senator hasn’t appeared serious about any type of mea culpa for his religion in Kennedy’s guarantees. On Thursday, I caught Cassidy as he hurried out of a congressional listening to room. He was nonetheless reviewing the appointees, he informed me and a number of other different reporters who gathered round him. Once I chased after him down the hallway to ask extra questions, he informed me, “I’ll be placing out statements, and I’ll let these statements stand for themselves.” A member of his workers dismissed me with a curt “Thanks, sir.” Cassidy’s workers has declined repeated requests for an interview with the senator for the reason that affirmation vote in January.
Except for Mitch McConnell, each GOP senator voted to verify Kennedy. All of them should personal the well being secretary’s actions. However Cassidy gave the impression to be the Republican most involved about Kennedy’s nomination, and there was a very good purpose to suppose that the physician would vote his conscience. In 2021, Cassidy was one in all seven Senate Republicans who voted to convict Donald Trump on an impeachment cost after the riot on the Capitol. However this time, the senator—who’s up for reelection subsequent 12 months, dealing with a extra MAGA-friendly challenger—in the end fell in line.
Cassidy tried to have it each methods: elevating Kennedy to his job whereas additionally vowing to constrain him. In casting his affirmation vote, Cassidy implied that the 2 could be in shut communication, and that Kennedy had requested for his enter on hiring choices. The 2 reportedly had breakfast in March to debate the well being secretary’s plan to dramatically reshape the division. “Senator Cassidy speaks usually with secretary Kennedy and believes these conversations are rather more productive after they’re held in non-public, not by press headlines,” a spokesperson for Cassidy wrote in an electronic mail. (A spokesperson for HHS didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.)
At instances, it has appeared as if Cassidy’s strategy has had some impact on the well being secretary. Amid the measles outbreak in Texas earlier this 12 months, Kennedy baselessly questioned the security of the MMR vaccine. In April, after two unvaccinated kids died, Cassidy posted on X: “Everybody ought to be vaccinated! There isn’t a therapy for measles. No profit to getting measles. Prime well being officers ought to say so unequivocally b/4 one other youngster dies.” Cassidy didn’t name out Kennedy by title, however the well being secretary appeared to get the message. Later that day, Kennedy posted that the measles vaccine was the best method to stave off sickness. (“Fully agree,” Cassidy responded.)
All issues thought-about, that’s a small victory. Regardless of Kennedy’s claims that he’s not an anti-vaxxer, he has enacted a plainly anti-vaccine agenda. Since being confirmed, he has pushed out the FDA’s high vaccine regulator, employed a fellow vaccine skeptic to analyze the purported hyperlink between autism and photographs, and questioned the security of childhood vaccinations at present advisable by the CDC. As my colleague Katherine J. Wu wrote this week, “Whether or not he’ll admit to it or not, he’s serving essentially the most core purpose of the anti-vaccine motion—eroding entry to, and belief in, immunization.”
The fact is that again channels could be solely so efficient. Cassidy’s principal energy is to name Kennedy earlier than the Senate well being committee, which he chairs, and demand a proof for Kennedy’s new appointees to the CDC’s vaccine-advisory committee. Cassidy would possibly very properly do this. In February, he stated that Kennedy would “come earlier than the committee on a quarterly foundation, if requested.” Kennedy did seem earlier than Cassidy’s committee final month to reply questions on his efforts to institute mass layoffs at his company. Some Republicans (and plenty of Democrats) pressed the secretary on these efforts, whereas others praised them. Cassidy, for his half, expressed considerations about Kennedy’s indiscriminate slicing of analysis applications, however nonetheless, he was largely deferential. “I agree with Secretary Kennedy that HHS wants reform,” Cassidy stated.
Even when he had disagreed, an offended alternate between a well being secretary and a Senate committee doesn’t assure any coverage adjustments. Lawmakers might attempt to act like authorities bureaucrats report back to them, however they’ve restricted energy as soon as a nominee is already of their job. Technically, lawmakers can impeach Cupboard members, however in American historical past, a sitting Cupboard member has by no means been impeached and subsequently faraway from workplace. The lengthy and arduous affirmation course of is meant to be the bulwark in opposition to doubtlessly harmful nominees being put in positions of energy. Cassidy and most of his Republican colleagues have already determined to not cease Kennedy from overseeing the biggest division within the federal authorities by finances. Now Kennedy is free to do no matter he needs—senators be damned.