Trump’s former surgeon general: One year in, the war on vaccination is undoing the Trump administration’s health agenda
Most voters want guidance from trained physicians and support continued vaccine innovation. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s contradict defy that mandate.
Just over a year ago, President Donald Trump nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, which sets policies and manages programs that directly affect every American.
The Secretary wasted no time implementing his Make America Healthy Again agenda. One year in, it’s worth taking stock of what has worked — and what hasn’t.
There’s no question that Americans, especially children, are suffering from a chronic disease crisis. The U.S. has lower life expectancy than other developed nations, and poorer health outcomes stem at least in part from poor nutrition and environmental pollutants.
2025 delivered progress around food and nutrition. For example, food manufacturers agreed to phase out eight synthetic dyes by the end of 2026. That achievement was widely praised, as it followed years of bipartisan efforts to remove the harmful additives present in many foods Americans eat — from M&Ms and Froot Loops to even mashed potatoes.
But while the push to make our food supply healthier holds enormous promise, actions to dissuade parents from ensuring their kids get highly effective vaccines with decades-long safety records threaten to erase those gains — and more.
Nine in 10 voters want guidance from trained physicians, and 85% of Trump voters support continued vaccine innovation. Yet many of RFK Jr ‘s actions this year have directly contradicted that mandate.
In June, the Health Secretary’s “clean sweep” of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) — the independent panel responsible for delivering vaccine guidance — included firing the 17 vetted experts and replacing them with handpicked skeptics. Relying on cherry-picked numbers and anecdotes, the current members have since rescinded recommendations for some flu vaccines and changed long-standing hepatitis B vaccination guidance. And they may soon exact broader changes to the childhood schedule.
RFK Jr has also cancelled $500 million in mRNA contracts — which would have built on President Trump’s landmark achievement with Operation Warp Speed — further undermining efforts to drive breakthroughs in vaccines for cancer, Alzheimer’s, and other critical diseases.
And the Secretary has fueled the misinformation surrounding vaccine safety and guidance that has become all too common. One in three adults in 2025 reported hearing the false claim that measles vaccine is more dangerous than the virus itself. That’s up from less than 20% in 2024, and it’s sparking understandable confusion among Americans.
Of course, vaccine evaluation and monitoring should be constant, particularly for those administered to children, to ensure safety and efficacy. But the simple fact is that vaccines are among the greatest feats of modern medicine. Routine shots are expected to prevent about 508 million cases of illness and well over a million deaths among children born between 1994 and 2023.