RFK Jr. Launches Podcast Aimed at Exposing ‘Lies’ About Health

Officials said the podcast will be the first from a sitting Cabinet secretary.
Published: 4/8/2026, 5:27:17 PM EDT
RFK Jr. Launches Podcast Aimed at Exposing ‘Lies’ About Health
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (L) speaks at the White House in Washington on Jan. 29, 2026. (Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is starting a podcast, he said in a promotional video statement released on April 8.

“This podcast is about telling the truth, especially when it’s uncomfortable,” Kennedy said.

In what’s being called “The Secretary Kennedy Podcast,” Kennedy said he would be engaging in “fearless conversations with critical thinkers,” including independent doctors, scientists, and people involved with medical innovation, about topics such as the rise in chronic disease.

“I’m going to ask the questions and lift the taboos and expose the hypocrisy and the conflicts and the corruption,” said Kennedy, who became health secretary in 2025 after years of working with non-governmental organizations on health efforts such as cleaning up contaminated water.

“We’re going to follow the evidence wherever it leads, and we’re going to name the names of the forces that obstruct the paths to public health. This isn’t going to be about politics. It’s about our families, about our children, and it’s about confronting the spiritual malaise and embracing the truth. If we want a healthy nation, we have to confront the lies that have made us spiritually, morally, and physically sick, the time for half-measures is now over.”

The video showed Kennedy sitting in front of a microphone in a studio with Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) branding, along with shelves displaying books, rocks, and other items.

No episodes have yet been released, and it was not clear whether Kennedy would touch on vaccines during his conversations. The health secretary had implemented or backed multiple changes to federal vaccine recommendations before a federal judge in March ruled that he and other officials did not follow statutes and regulations in effecting the updates. Since then, the administration’s only action on vaccines has been tweaking criteria for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory committee, and the government has not appealed the judge’s decision.

Dr. Robert Malone, who Kennedy named to the advisory panel, which was also impacted by the ruling, said later in March on a podcast run by the Informed Consent Action Network—another organization that has lobbied for restricting vaccines—that the Trump administration has been pulling back from changes to vaccine policies ahead of the midterms, pointing in part to Kennedy’s recent appearance on the Joe Rogan podcast.

“How can you have Bobby on Joe Rogan and the word ‘vaccine’ never escapes his lips?” Malone said. “That’s a tell.”

Kennedy only mentioned vaccines once on the Rogan episode, when speaking about how President Donald Trump questioned vaccines during the 2016 election. He did not mention vaccines when speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference on March 28.

Trump administration officials said that Kennedy’s podcast will help spread a message about chronic disease and improving health to a wider audience.

“This is part of our larger strategy to bring the Make America Healthy Again message to as wide an audience as we can,” said Liam Nahill, HHS digital director.

Kennedy ran his own podcast before joining the second Trump administration, and regularly joins other podcasts to discuss a range of issues.

Officials said they believe Kennedy will be the first sitting Cabinet secretary to host a podcast.

“We’re kind of bringing podcasting into the government as an official form and arm of our messaging,” said Tyler Burger, the producer of the new podcast and HHS digital communications manager. He said the set has the capacity for up to four people to sit and converse.

Because podcasts are now commonly made not only on audio but video, they are regularly clipped and shared across social media platforms, giving them “massive” reach, according to Melina Much, a postdoctoral fellow for New York University’s Center for Social Media and Politics. Much said podcasts also tend to be more intimate, conversational, and friendly than a traditional interview, allowing administration officials to promote themselves without facing as much pushback.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.