-
American Culture Quiz: Test yourself on groundbreaking gadgets, medical marvels and Southern staples - 3 mins ago
-
All eyes on Riley Leonard vs. Caleb Downs matchup in CFP National Championship - 6 mins ago
-
Armed Hamas militants celebrate ceasefire deal in Gaza - 32 mins ago
-
Golden Retriever Hanging Out With Lambs Was Going ‘So Well’—Until It Wasn’t - 39 mins ago
-
Jayden Daniels on Commanders vs. Lions, reflects on 2024 season | FOX NFL Sunday - 51 mins ago
-
Misconduct alleged in report ex-UCLA professors tried to block. They got no discipline - about 1 hour ago
-
Warning Over Donald Trump’s ‘Catastrophic’ Plans To Cut School Funds - about 1 hour ago
-
Trump inauguration performer Lee Greenwood defends Carrie Underwood against critics - 2 hours ago
-
Jimmy Johnson REACTS to Cowboys’ head coaching search | NFL on FOX - 2 hours ago
-
As L.A. fire victims rebuild, let’s make safety the first priority - 2 hours ago
Trump Won’t Care that RFK Jr. Compared Him to Hitler, Ex-Aide Says
President-elect Donald Trump is unlikely to “care” about freshly-unearthed recordings of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. comparing him to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, according to former Trump White House aide Alyssa Farah Griffin.
CNN reported on Thursday that Kennedy, who the president-elect nominated as the next Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary last week, compared Trump to Hitler and other fascist dictators like Benito Mussolini multiple times while co-hosting the Ring of Fire radio show.
Kennedy also reportedly praised descriptions of Trump supporters as “outright Nazis” and “belligerent idiots.” Additionally, the future Trump ally once suggested that Trump was worse than Hitler because “Hitler was interested in policy” and not “non compos mentis,” a Latin phrase meaning “of unsound mind.”
Griffin, who has become an outspoken critic of the president-elect since exiting the White House in the waning days of his first administration, suggested during a CNN appearance on Friday that Kennedy’s past remarks would not upset Trump.
The ex-Trump aide pointed out that Vice President-elect JD Vance had repeatedly denounced his future running mate, including pondering whether Trump would be “America’s Hitler” in 2016, while arguing that the president-elect’s only concern was that his allies “praise him now.”
“Honestly, his own vice president had used similar language to RFK,” said Griffin. “I don’t think that’s going to be an issue, as long as RFK is willing to praise him now and say that he was wrong about him.”
Newsweek reached out for comment to Trump’s office via email on Thursday night.
Trump’s choice of Kennedy to lead the nation’s healthcare infrastructure has proven controversial, in large part due to Kennedy’s long history of promoting anti-vaccine conspiracy theories and other questionable claims regarding health and medicine.
Kennedy has faced further backlash from conservative Republicans for largely backing abortion rights. In a statement issued last week, former Vice President Mike Pence blasted the choice as a betrayal to the “unapologetically pro-life” values of the first Trump administration.
“The nomination of RFK Jr. to serve as Secretary of HHS is an abrupt departure from the pro-life record of our administration and should be deeply concerning to millions of Pro-Life Americans who have supported the Republican Party and our nominees for decades,” Pence said.
Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, who challenged Trump during the 2024 GOP presidential primaries but later endorsed him, argued that Kennedy should not have been nominated due to his lack of qualifications during her SiriusXM radio show on Wednesday.
“He is not educated, trained or practiced in health at all. He has spent his entire career as a trial lawyer, an environmental lawyer and a liberal Democrat,” said Haley. “I understand he wants to raise awareness on chemicals in food and vaccinations, but then let him be a health advisor.”
Trump’s pick for U.S. attorney general, former Congressman Matt Gaetz, withdrew his controversial Cabinet nomination over concerns that he was becoming a distraction to the second Trump administration on Thursday. The president-elect nominated former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi for the job hours later.
Source link