Friday, September 19, 2025

RFK Jr ally chosen to lead CDC as departing officials hit out at vaccine messaging – live

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White House names deputy health secretary Jim O’Neill acting CDC director

In the sudden absence of the usually ubiquitous Donald Trump, a Trump administration official has confirmed to the Guardian by email that the White House has picked deputy health secretary Jim O’Neill to serve as acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

O’Neill, a biotech investor and former speechwriter for the health department during the George W Bush administration, will replace microbiologist Susan Monarez until a new permanent director is confirmed by the Senate.

Monarez, who was confirmed less than a month ago, was the first non-physician to lead the premier US public health agency since 1953.

O’Neill, who worked for Silicon Valley investor Peter Thiel for a decade after his brief tenure in the Bush administration, is not a medical doctor or a scientist of any kind.

Key events

RFK Jr’s push to link vaccines to autism helped convince CDC leaders to resign

In interviews on Thursday with Reuters and the Washington Post, Dr Daniel Jernigan, one of the three CDC leaders to resign in protest on Wednesday, said that the last straw for him was being forced to re-examine the false claim that vaccines cause autism.

The health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, promised “announcements” in September on what has caused a spike in autism at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

Jernigan, whose department oversaw the vaccine safety group, said that he was “asked to revise and to review and change studies” about vaccine safety data by Kennedy’s aides, Lyn Redwood and David Geier, anti-vaccine activists who promote a debunked link with autism.

Redwood, former leader of the Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group founded by Kennedy that has featured the parents of a Texas girl who died of measles in its campaign against the MMR vaccine, is listed as an expert and Geier as a senior data analyst in the health department employee database.

Jernigan said a request for Geier to be given access to vaccine safety data prompted him to raise patient privacy and ethical concerns with senior officials in the health department.

“I was told was that the requests were legally supported and that that was enough. But for me, that’s just not enough,” Jernigan said. “I have come to that point where I’m not able to fulfil the duties that I have as a public health professional.”

Dr Debra Houry, who resigned as the CDC’s chief medical officer, said she and her colleagues had become aware that vaccine advisers appointed by Kennedy, a longtime critic of vaccines, were making recommendations before reviewing data.

“For us, that’s problematic,” Houry said in an interview with Reuters. “As scientists, you should never know in advance what you want the data to show.”

Dr Demetre Daskalakis, who stepped down as the director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases on Wednesday, said that he believes the goal of Kennedy and his close advisers is “to create chaos and more mistrust of vaccines, so that there is less demand for vaccines, and then over time, they can demonstrate that there’s less need” for federal vaccine subsidies.

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