Kennedy
Refuses to Commit to Backing New C.D.C. Director on Vaccines
In a
tense congressional hearing, the health secretary also said he bore no
responsibility for the measles outbreak in the United States.
Christina
Jewett Sheryl
Gay Stolberg
By
Christina Jewett and Sheryl Gay Stolberg
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/us/politics/rfk-jr-vaccines-erica-schwartz.html
April 21,
2026
Health
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday refused to commit to supporting the
vaccine recommendations of President Trump’s nominee to lead the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. The nominee, Dr. Erica Schwartz, has publicly
supported immunizations and drawn applause from mainstream public health
leaders.
“If Dr.
Schwartz is confirmed, will you commit on the record today to implement
whatever vaccine guidance she issues without interference?” Representative Raul
Ruiz, Democrat of California, asked Mr. Kennedy during a tense hearing on
Capitol Hill, the secretary’s fourth congressional hearing since last Thursday.
“I’m not
going to make that kind of commitment,” Mr. Kennedy replied. In response to
other questions from Dr. Ruiz, a physician, Mr. Kennedy said that he approved
of Dr. Schwartz’s nomination and had spoken to her multiple times, but had not
spoken directly to Mr. Trump about her selection.
During
the hearing before the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Mr. Kennedy pushed
back on Democrats’ assertions that he bore some responsibility for the measles
outbreak in the United States, the worst the country has experienced in
decades. He told members of the panel that the outbreak is global, that it
started before he took office and that those who were sick were mostly 5 or
older, which meant their parents had decided against vaccination before he was
in office.
The
back-and-forth highlighted the challenges Mr. Kennedy faces in trying to
sidestep the unpopular vaccine skepticism he has espoused in office, as the
White House pressures him to focus on more popular topics, such as healthier
eating and fighting fraud. By defending himself on his measles record and his
failure to support a mainstream C.D.C. director, he gave congressional
Democrats the fodder they were seeking.
“It’s
real life, Mr. Secretary, and you have blood on your hands,” said
Representative Marc Veasey, Democrat of Texas. He noted that Mr. Kennedy’s
lengthy opening statement had made no mention of vaccines, “which is odd,
because you’ve basically spent your entire career and life trying to shatter
American trust in vaccines.”
As
Democrats battered Mr. Kennedy, often cutting him off before he could answer
their questions, the secretary lobbed insults back, which prompted
Representative Diana Harshbarger, Republican of Tennessee, who led the hearing,
to tell everyone to “simmer down.”
Republicans
defended Mr. Kennedy, citing his transformation of the country’s dietary
guidelines and his work to improve rural health care. Ms. Harshbarger, a
pharmacist, praised Mr. Kennedy’s work to expand access to peptides, often
unproven compounds that are popular in the wellness industry.
She said
his record on measles had been distorted by “a lot of misleading commentary,”
and asked him to “explain how H.H.S. is strengthening measles trust with
patients and families.” Mr. Kennedy thanked her, saying he wanted to address
the “talking point for Democrats that somehow I caused the measles epidemic.”
Mr.
Kennedy’s views on vaccines have dominated his tenure. Last summer, he fired
all 17 members of the committee that advises the C.D.C. on vaccines, and
replaced them with a number of vaccine skeptics. A court recently invalidated
the firings. Mr. Kennedy has responded by changing the committee’s charter so
that he can avoid the court ruling.
Two
months after the mass firings, Mr. Kennedy fired the C.D.C. director, Susan
Monarez, who had been confirmed by the Senate less than a month earlier. Dr.
Monarez told lawmakers she was pushed out because she would not commit to
approving the recommendations of the secretary’s handpicked vaccine advisers.
In his
testimony on Tuesday, Mr. Kennedy, as he has in the past, insisted that he
fired Dr. Monarez because she had refused to say she was “trustworthy.” He said
the move had nothing to do with vaccines.
On
Tuesday, and in two hearings last week, Mr. Kennedy offered a misleading
defense of his record on the continuing measles outbreaks across the United
States. Last year, two children in Texas died of the disease, and there were
2,288 confirmed cases. So far this year, there have been more than 1,700 cases,
according to the C.D.C.
Mr.
Kennedy maintained that his views on vaccines had not influenced the
Mennonites, an insular community that shuns vaccination and suffered a measles
outbreak. “The Mennonites have not vaccinated since 1796. That was long before
I was born,” he said.
Anabaptist
Christian sects, including the Mennonites and the Amish, do have historically
low vaccination rates. But studies show that their rates of vaccination dipped
precipitously over the last decade, and especially after the coronavirus
pandemic.
During
that time, Mr. Kennedy has been an outspoken activist on vaccines, and has
questioned their safety publicly and repeatedly.
As the
chairman of Children’s Health Defense, the nonprofit he ran until he launched a
bid for the presidency in 2023, Mr. Kennedy often traveled to the locations of
measles outbreaks.
He went
to American Samoa in 2019 after measles vaccination rates there plummeted, and
proposed to set up a data-tracking system for what he described as a “natural
experiment” that would potentially prove vaccination was not necessary for good
health. Soon afterward, 83 Samoans, mostly young children, died of measles. In
questions he answered after his confirmation hearings in January 2025, he
suggested that an “experimental measles vaccine imported from India” caused the
deaths.
After
measles had spread widely in an Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn and
Rockland County, N.Y., in 2019, he filed a volley of lawsuits challenging
efforts to require vaccinations.
Mr.
Kennedy faced intense questioning during his confirmation hearings, showing
signs that he continued to view the research of known vaccine critics as more
convincing than more establishment science.
Two weeks
after he was sworn in as health secretary, a child died of measles in a rural
cotton town in West Texas. Unlike previous health secretaries, he did not
encourage parents to protect their children through vaccination.
In a Fox
Digital column on March 2 last year, he called vaccination the most effective
way to prevent the spread of measles, but said: “The decision to vaccinate is a
personal one.”
Christina
Jewett covers the Food and Drug Administration, which means keeping a close eye
on drugs, medical devices, food safety and tobacco policy.
Sheryl
Gay Stolberg is a correspondent based in Washington for The New York Times,
covering Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and President Trump’s health
agenda.


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