RFK, MAHA and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
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A new group, known as the MAHA Institute, is riding a wave of disdain toward big industry to enact change in federal policy. | A policy and advocacy shop spawned out of various Robert F. Kennedy Jr.-aligned groups feels like it's winning the war against the scientific establishment and the media.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s short time leading America's health agencies has already destabilized the uneasy alliance that vaulted him into President Trump's Cabinet. Why it matters: The "Make America Healthy Again" movement — a loose umbrella of vaccine skeptics,
A change in recommending Covid vaccines for children and pregnant women would circumvent an expert panel but please many MAHA fans.
From canola oil to colorful dyes, the US food industry is girding for a shift away from the ingredients that made American diets among the cheapest in the world.
RFK Jr. “made a point of the evils of government doing the bidding of business in food and nutrition and medical areas—this starts to look kind of like the same thing,” said Noah Bookbinder, head of the advocacy group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics.
The Make America Healthy Again movement is coalescing around a new effort to turn its goals into federal policy. The Trump administration is listening.
MAHA Mom: 'If you can't pronounce it, don't eat it': Meet the food blogger influencing RFK Jr. “I’d never seen anyone in his position putting these issues in the forefront,” she said.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s war on pesticides is alarming White House and federal agency officials, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Allies of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. launch the Make America Healthy Again Institute to outsource HHS' oversight and reform.
During the hearing, lawmakers called out Kennedy on his reluctance to advise parents to vaccinate their children as the nation faces a measles outbreak.