Trump administration to release ‘Make America Healthy Again’ report
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Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long emphasised the need to confront America’s surging rates of chronic illness.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - The Trump administration is expected to release as soon as May 22 a highly anticipated report outlining Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s priorities to “Make America Healthy Again (Maha)”, with a likely focus on processed foods, environmental toxins and vaccines.
Mr Kennedy has long emphasised the need to confront America’s surging rates of chronic illness – particularly in children – even as critics say he downplays the continued threat of infectious disease.
Since taking office, Mr Kennedy has ordered the National Institutes of Health to investigate the drivers of autism
He has also urged the food industry to phase out synthetic food colourings
Ultra-processed foods, expected to feature heavily in the report, are another area of broad concern
Yet the administration has simultaneously slashed funding for research aimed at improving children’s diets.
Dr Kevin Hall, a leading government nutrition scientist, resigned earlier in 2025, citing censorship by federal officials, he told The New York Times.
Even before the report’s release, it has exposed a rift among Republicans over agricultural pesticides – which Mr Kennedy fought against as an environmental lawyer.
The divide pits pro-industry lawmakers and lobbying groups against the “Maha base” of vocal RFK Jr. supporters.
Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith, a Mississippi Republican, said she was “deeply concerned” by reports the assessment “may unfairly target American agriculture, modern farming practices and the crop protection tools that roughly 2 per cent of our population relies on to help feed the remaining 98 per cent”.
A key flashpoint is glyphosate, the main ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup weedkiller, long scrutinised by environmentalists, wellness influencers, and so-called “Maha Moms”.
“We urge you and the Commission to stand firm in the face of these demands, which seek to protect corporations at the expense of American families,” wrote a group of 360 Kennedy supporters in an open letter ahead of the report’s publication. AFP

