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Democratic Senators call for Kennedy to recuse himself from vaccine issues if confirmed

Two U.S. Senators who will vote on Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the top U.S. Health Official this week demanded that he recuse from all agency issues related to vaccines. They argued that Donald Trump's nominee holds unscientific beliefs about their safety, and is poised to profit financially from such decisions.

Senator Ron Wyden and Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, the top Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee and the Democratic nominee to head the Department of Health and Human Services by Republican Trump, asked Kennedy to promise not to bring any lawsuits involving vaccinations for at least 4 years after leaving his office.

Kennedy, an environmentalist of 70 years who spread misinformation about vaccines, has been questioned by Republican and Democratic Senators in the Senate Finance and Health committees last week. The Finance Committee is expected to vote on Kennedy's nomination this week.

Some groups that are against Kennedy's confirmation view a few Republican senators, such as Senator Bill Cassidy or Senator Mitch McConnell, as swing votes.

Kennedy, if confirmed, would lead HHS which oversees over $3 trillion in healthcare expenditures, including the Food and Drug Administration and agency responsible for the Medicare and Medicaid programs, covering almost half of Americans.

Kennedy was questioned during his nomination due to his connections with the Los Angeles law firm Wisner Baum that specializes in pharmaceutical injury cases.

According to a January letter Kennedy sent to an HHS official on ethics, he has an agreement to earn 10% of the fees awarded for contingency cases that he refers. Kennedy stated in the letter that, if confirmed, he would retain this financial interest for cases that did not directly affect the U.S. Government.

Kennedy, after his confirmation hearings, sent an supplemental letter to HHS on Feb. 1. In it, Kennedy wrote that he would assign his right to be paid from cases which do not directly affect the U.S. Government to a nondependent adult member of his family.

He refused to pay claims made against Southern California Edison and Boeing, as well as Pacific Gas and Electric Corporation in relation to damages caused by previous California wildfires.

In their letter to Kennedy, Wyden and Warren stated that the arrangement in your Ethics Agreement Amendment was "plainly inadequate", as it appears to allow a member of your immediate family to profit financially from your role as Secretary.

They wrote: "It is possible that you could receive a significant financial reward for your family if you were to influence and make decisions about vaccines and other communications, which would fall under your purview as Secretary."

Wyden and Warren said they did not trust Kennedy's disclosures before the Finance Committee. They claimed Kennedy had failed to disclose "hundreds" of cases he referred to Wisner-Baum to which a 10% referral fee agreement applied and that he failed to clarify which vaccines were used in these cases.

Kennedy responded to questions posed by the Finance Committee following his confirmation hearing with: "During my time at Wisner-Baum, I referred hundreds of cases to them." It is not possible to respond to all the questions in the time available. I don't have the majority of the information.

Exclusively reported in January, Kennedy played a key role in organizing mass lawsuits against Merck regarding its human papillomavirus vaccine Gardasil.

Kennedy stated in his responses to the Finance Committee that he was not going to recuse himself for various HHS issues related to the Gardasil vaccination, or from public statements about Gardasil.

Kennedy, the founder of Children's Health Defense (an anti-vaccine organization), claims that he's not against vaccines. The group has filed lawsuits in federal and state courts regarding vaccines.

Senator Cassidy (a Republican senator who is a member of the Finance Committee) told Kennedy, last week, that he has reservations about Kennedy’s "misleading argument" on vaccines.

Kennedy would need at least 50 senators to support his nomination, which would enable Vice President JDVance to vote again to break the tie.

(source: Reuters)