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Axios
Axios
Health

Ex-CDC official says RFK Jr. pressured her to stay silent

Former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Susan Monarez told members of a Senate committee Wednesday that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told her to "never" express concerns about HHS policy to Congress.

Why it matters: Monarez's claims that Kennedy tried to limit lawmakers' access to CDC deliberations come just a day before the secretary's handpicked vaccine advisers convene to debate vaccine recommendations.


What they're saying: "Secretary Kennedy became aware of that, and he was very concerned that I had spoken to members of Congress," Monarez told lawmakers.

  • "He told me I was never to do it again," she added.

The other side: A Health Department spokesperson told Axios that President Trump fired Monarez because she could not restore "public trust" in the CDC.

  • "Susan is grossly distorting the Secretary's clear and consistent expectation that all HHS staff follow standard, long-standing protocols for communicating with Congress through the office of the Assistant Secretary for Legislation," the department spokesperson told Axios in an emailed statement.

Zoom in: Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), a physician who cast a key vote in confirming Kennedy, later said it was "entirely appropriate for someone with oversight concerns" to contact himself or the committee.

  • Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) echoed Cassidy's statements, saying he found it "rather astounding that anyone is concerned that government heads of agencies talk to the elected officials of the United States of America."
  • "That is what they are supposed to do," Sanders said.

Driving the news: The former CDC director insists that she was fired from the agency because she wouldn't rubber-stamp vaccine recommendations from a controversial committee without seeing scientific evidence to support them.

  • The group, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, is set to meet Thursday to debate who should get the COVID-19, measles and hepatitis B vaccines.
  • Monarez also told lawmakers on Wednesday that the committee plans to alter America's childhood vaccine schedule, which determines when kids should get vaccinated.

Between the lines: Monarez and former CDC Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry both expressed concerns to the senators about the vaccine committee's expected recommendations.

  • Monarez said she was "very nervous" about the findings, citing the medical community's concerns about the committee members' professional backgrounds and experience evaluating data.
  • Similarly, Houry said she has "significant concerns" about the committee's decision-making process as the group has not published any data for the public to review.

Go deeper: Ex-CDC director: RFK Jr. planning September vaccine changes

This story has been updated with the HHS response.

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