Robert Kennedy Jr. praised by Republicans, attacked by Democrats at House hearing

Updated

Republicans in Congress brought Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Capitol Hill Thursday to help them amplify one of their core political messages: They have been victimized by a conspiracy between shadowy forces in the government and Big Tech.

Kennedy, the son of Robert F. Kennedy and the nephew of President John F. Kennedy, had long been a critic of vaccines before the COVID-19 vaccine was developed.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. arrives to testify at a hearing of the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) (Jonathan Ernst / reuters)

But during the coronavirus pandemic he became a hero to those who questioned the vaccines. Kennedy’s vaccine-critical group, Children’s Health Defense, saw its revenue double in 2020 to nearly $7 million, and visits to its website went from fewer than 150,000 a month pre-pandemic to more than 4.5 million a month, according to an AP investigation.

He appeared Thursday before the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government.

Lauded by Republicans

Kennedy was welcomed to the hearing with a lengthy, almost reverential introduction by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas.

Committee Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, began the hearing by claiming that Kennedy had been censored by the White House just a few days into President Biden’s term. He pointed to an email sent Jan. 23, 2021, by a midlevel staffer in the Biden White House to a Twitter official.

Biden aide Clarke Humphrey wrote that she “wanted to flag” a tweet that Kennedy had written the previous day calling the death of baseball legend Hank Aaron at age 86 “suspicious” because he died a few weeks after receiving the Moderna vaccine for COVID-19.

Jim Jordan and Stacey Plaskett.
Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Democratic delegate from the U.S. Virgin Islands Stacey Plaskett preside over the hearing. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) (Jonathan Ernst / reuters)

Aaron's death was ruled by the Fulton County, Ga., medical examiner's office to have been due to natural causes.

Humphrey asked Twitter to “get moving on the process for having [the tweet] removed ASAP.”

Jordan, the Republican committee chair, used this as an example of “Big Government” colluding with “Big Tech” to silence views they don’t like.

Kennedy claimed he was “the first person, as the chairman pointed out, censored by the Biden administration.” He said he had also been “censored by the Trump administration,” though he did not provide an example.

It took hours for any Democrat on the committee to point out that, in fact, Kennedy’s tweet about Aaron was never removed. It remains on Twitter to this day.

“How can the government actually censor anyone if there's enough freedom within these companies ... that they reject whatever request that government makes?” asked Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y.

Dan Goldman.
Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y. (Irynka Hromotska/Reuters) (Irynka Hromotska / reuters)

Kennedy has spread debunked claims about links between some childhood vaccines and autism. His personal Instagram account was suspended in February 2021 for “repeatedly sharing debunked claims about the coronavirus or vaccines,” and the Facebook and Instagram pages for Children’s Health Defense were suspended in August 2022. Both have since been restored.

But Kennedy told the New Yorker recently that his Instagram account was “taken away from me … at the behest of the White House.”

Under fire for 'despicable' comments

Democrats, meanwhile, castigated Kennedy for comments he made recently in which he said that the COVID-19 virus was “ethnically targeted to attack Caucasians and Black people” while sparing “Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese.”

“We don’t know whether it was deliberately targeted or not,” he said at a dinner in New York City, as first reported by the New York Post.

There is disagreement inside the U.S. government over whether the COVID-19 virus escaped from a Chinese lab due to an accident or whether it emerged on its own. But Kennedy was speaking about work that he claimed was ongoing by both the U.S. and Chinese governments to develop “ethnic bioweapons.”

He later backtracked, saying, “I certainly don't believe that they were deliberately engineered.”

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testifies at a hearing.
Kennedy testifies at the hearing on Thursday. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) (Jonathan Ernst / reuters)

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., called Kennedy’s comments “despicable” and lambasted Jordan for giving him the platform of a congressional hearing to amplify his views. She made a motion to move the session into a private setting, which Republicans said was an attempt to “censor” Kennedy.

Wasserman Schultz also mocked Kennedy’s past comparisons of government mandates meant to limit the spread of COVID-19 to the totalitarian controls of Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler.

“Even in Hitler’s Germany, you could cross the Alps to Switzerland. You could hide in an attic like Anne Frank did,” Kennedy said last year. He later apologized for the remark.

“Was it as hard to wear a mask during COVID as it was to hide under floorboards or false walls so you weren't murdered?” Wasserman Schultz asked.

Kennedy grew flustered under her questioning. “That’s ridiculous,” he said. “I never made that comparison.”

A Democratic lament

The most bracing critique of Kennedy came from Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., who told the environmental lawyer that he got into politics because of Kennedy’s father, who ran for president in 1968 and was assassinated that year after a campaign speech in California.

“I revere your name,” Connolly told Kennedy. “I began my political interest with your father.”

But Connolly said the hearing made him “profoundly sad.”

“You are here for cynical reasons, to be used politically by that side of the aisle, to embarrass the current president of the United States,” Connolly said. “You're an enabler in that effort today. And it brings shame on a storied name that I revere.”

Rep. Gerry Connolly.
Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va. (Andrew Harnik/Pool via Reuters/File) (POOL New / reuters)

Advertisement