Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
RFK Jr. Open To Restrictions on Medication Abortion, Senator Says
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) said Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Trumps pick to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, pledged to support efforts to reimpose restrictions on the abortion pill mifepristone if Trump wants to. Hawley told reporters Wednesday he suggested to Kennedy during a Tuesday meeting that it would be a wise idea to return to the rule under the last Trump administration, which required in-person dispensing of the drug. (Weixel, 12/18)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. arrived on Capitol Hill this week with a clear goal: build support for his controversial selection to lead the nations health agencies. So far, so good. Kennedy has met with more than a dozen GOP senators, with many lawmakers praising those conversations and signaling that they plan to vote to confirm him as secretary of health and human services next year. (Diamond, Roubein and Liss-Roy, 12/18)
The moment he arrived on Capitol Hill this week as President-elect Donald Trumps nominee for health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confronted with perhaps the top task of his confirmation: papering over his decades-long record of controversy. ... The fact that Kennedy needed to declare his support for the polio vaccine, one of the great medical advances of the 20th century, stems from a New York Times report that one of his top advisers had petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to revoke approval for the life-saving injection. (Brodey and Puzzanghera, 12/19)
The kids seen by Dolores Mejia around suburban Phoenix have been growing heavier in recent years. Their parents, too, she says. Mejia, a 75-year-old retiree, says shes also had her own weight struggles on the scale. Thats why Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s pledge to Make America Healthy Again as he campaigned alongside Donald Trump caught her attention. She liked the questions Kennedy raised about the role of processed foods in Americas obesity epidemic. After hearing Kennedy out, she concluded: We cannot trust the health organizations weve trusted for years to tell us that our foods are safe. (Seitz and Sanders, 12/18)
Also
With Republican pickups both nationally and in his home state, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is searching for the right balance when preparing to push back against GOP priorities, while also showing that he's willing to work with them on issues important to middle class voters. After Democrats lost the presidential election, Walz is now back home working out of the state capitol in St. Paul, Minn., where he recently described the one question that keeps him up at night - why more voters chose President-elect Donald Trump. (Masters, 12/19)