RFK Jr. tells HHS staffers to 'move out'

By 
 February 15, 2025

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new Secretary of the Health and Human Services (HHS) department, has reported told certain HHS staffers that they should "move out." 

Kennedy, according to the Washington Examinergave the order on Thursday.

This was shortly after Kennedy was confirmed by the Senate and sworn-in by Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch as the next HHS secretary.

In other words, Kennedy is wasting absolutely no time at all in getting his planned reforms going.

Here's what Kennedy said:

Kennedy made the remark during an interview that he did with the Fox News Channel shortly after becoming the next HHS secretary. You can check it out here.

Kennedy said:

I have a list in my head ... we have a generic list of the kind of people that — if you’ve been involved in good science, you have got nothing to worry about. If you care about public health, you’ve got nothing to worry about. If you’re in there working for the pharmaceutical industry, then I’d say you should move out and work for the pharmaceutical industry.

This will come as no surprise to anyone who knows anything about Kennedy.

This is also why D.C. politicians with ties to Big Pharma worked so hard to try to derail his confirmation.

But, Kennedy got in, and, now, he is working to "Make America Healthy Again."

Looking forward

Kennedy is expected to make big changes to America's health system, with, of course, the approval of President Donald Trump.

The Washington Examiner separately reports:

As many as 1,300 employees with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are slated to be let go as soon as Friday, cutting the public health agency’s workforce by 10%. The cuts, reported by multiple publications, come a day after Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was confirmed by the Senate and sworn into office. Senior officials were told Friday morning that about 5,200 probationary employees and recent hires would be released across HHS, Stat reported. The firings will affect both the CDC and the National Institutes of Health.

This is a huge shakeup, but it is in-line with other big moves that the Trump administration has been making.

These kinds of big reforms are also what Trump campaigned on and what more than half of the country voted for.

Trump and his picks are following through on Trump's campaign promises, and, so far, things are not looking so good for the D.C. establishment. At this rate, by the end of Trump's administration, there might not be much of an establishment left.

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