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Top US vaccine official resigns over RFK Jr’s ‘misinformation and lies’

Top US vaccine official resigns over RFK Jr’s ‘misinformation and lies’
Dr Peter Marks was seen as a guardrail against any future politicization of the FDA’s approval of life-saving vaccines.

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Washington/The Guardian
Sat 29 Mar 2025 07.09 EDT

A senior health official in the US, who was seen as a guardrail against any future politicisation of the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of life-saving vaccines, has resigned abruptly, citing the health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr’s “misinformation and lies”.

Dr Peter Marks served as the FDA’s top vaccine official. He had been lauded by Donald Trump during the US president’s first term for his role in Operation Warp Speed, the initiative that developed, manufactured and helped distribute the Covid-19 vaccines.

Multiple media outlets, including the Wall Street Journal and New York Times, citing people familiar with the matter, reported late on Friday that Marks had been given the choice to resign or be fired by a Health and Human Services (HHS) department official. He chose to resign. The FDA is a key federal agency within HHS.

In a resignation letter, referring to Kennedy, Marks wrote: “It has become clear that truth and transparency are not desired by the secretary, but rather he wishes subservient confirmation of his misinformation and lies.”

Marks also issued a stark warning, according to media outlets who obtained the letter, saying: “Undermining confidence in well-established vaccines that have met the high standards for quality, safety and effectiveness that have been in place for decades at FDA is irresponsible, detrimental to public health and a clear danger to our nation’s health, safety and security.”

The departure follows reports that Kennedy has turned to a noted vaccine sceptic, David Geier, to lead the HHS in a study of potential links between vaccines and autism. Any links between autism and vaccines have long been debunked.

Kennedy has claimed he is not anti-vaccine, but for years he has led a movement to sow doubts about their safety and effectiveness. In 2021, a group then led by Kennedy called for the emergency approval of Covid-19 vaccines to be revoked, saying: “The current risks of serious adverse events or deaths outweigh the benefits.”

Studies later showed that claim was inaccurate. A study by the Commonwealth Fund found that Covid-19 vaccines saved 3.2 million American lives and prevented more than 18m hospitalisations through November 2022.

During his confirmation process, Kennedy ultimately secured the votes of almost all Republican senators, including Dr Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, by promising that he would not change the FDA’s system for approving vaccines.

But that system was overseen by Marks, who has been with the FDA since 2012 and oversaw the division’s approval process for vaccines, biotech and blood products.

The Wall Street Journal reported a statement on the resignation by an HHS official: “If Peter Marks does not want to get behind restoring science to its golden standard and promoting radical transparency, then he has no place at FDA under the strong leadership of secretary Kennedy.”

Marks’s departure comes a day after the Trump administration said it was laying off 10,000 employees at HHS. In comments about the move posted on YouTube, Kennedy suggested his office was facing opposition inside the department from “defiant bureaucrats” who had stopped his office from gaining access to “closely guarded databases that might reveal the dangers of certain drugs and medical interventions”.

The Guardian has sought more information about Kennedy’s remarks but has not yet received a comment from HHS. Some experts have warned that Kennedy and other senior Trump-appointed health officials may seek to challenge the authorisation behind the Covid-19 vaccines. Kennedy also said in his confirmation hearings that he had been asked by Trump to study the safety of mifepristone, which is used for medication abortion and has already been extensively investigated for safety.

It is not clear what precise databases Kennedy was referring to in his YouTube statement. When pharmaceutical companies seek FDA approval for drugs they have developed, they disclose proprietary information, which the FDA keeps confidential. That includes information about manufacturing methods and clinical study reports.
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isthisafakeprofile · 61-69, M
“Guardrail”? That is dim speak for a deep sister pushing dim agendas. Good riddance to him AND the rest.
JSul3 · 70-79
@isthisafakeprofile Enjoy TB as it is beginning to spread....and the measles.

Perhaps RFK Jr.'s plan is to allow a thinning of the herd. Only the strong survive, right?
isthisafakeprofile · 61-69, M
More like Fauci, Gates and their ilk already started that. RFKJr is busy getting chemicals outlawed in Canada out of our food supply. You dims approve that. The children of patriotic US citizen taxpayers do not. @JSul3
JSul3 · 70-79
@isthisafakeprofile Removing food coloring is fine ...but ending vaccines and research?
Well ..just watch....starts with measles....then TB ....
@isthisafakeprofile conservatives and high death rates go together, from the returning childhood illnesses to cars and guns! Trust the Dems to do nothing.
isthisafakeprofile · 61-69, M
You’re making that up. @JSul3
JSul3 · 70-79
@isthisafakeprofile Do a web search.
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JSul3 · 70-79
@isthisafakeprofile Measles are spreading in Texas.
A measles outbreak spanning Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma reached at least 453 cases Friday and might be linked to cases in other states and across borders.

Texas has reported 400 outbreak-associated cases, New Mexico reported 44, and Oklahoma reported nine – seven confirmed and two probable – as of Friday.

Friday’s updates are 74 cases higher than the last update Tuesday, but experts say these numbers are a severe undercount because many cases are going unreported


Yes, tuberculosis (TB) cases in the United States have been increasing in recent years.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there were 9,633 reported cases of TB in the U.S. in 2023, an increase from 8,338 cases in 2022. This represents a 15% increase.
The increase in TB cases is particularly pronounced in certain states, such as Kansas, where there has been a significant outbreak. As of January 2025, there were over 60 confirmed cases in the state.
While TB cases are still low compared to other parts of the world, the recent increase is concerning. It highlights the importance of continued surveillance and efforts to prevent and treat TB, especially in vulnerable populations.

Go ahead and stick your head in the sand.
isthisafakeprofile · 61-69, M
Who are you lamely attempting to blame for that? @JSul3
@isthisafakeprofile the people voted for this kind of sickness and high death rates.
isthisafakeprofile · 61-69, M
We are getting what the majority of patriotic US citizen taxpayers want and it will succeed. @Roundandroundwego