Business
RFK Jr. Sought to Stop Covid Vaccinations 6 Months After Rollout
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald J. Trump’s choice to lead the nation’s health agencies, formally asked the Food and Drug Administration to revoke the authorization of all Covid vaccines during a deadly phase of the pandemic when thousands of Americans were still dying every week.
Mr. Kennedy filed a petition with the F.D.A. in May 2021 demanding that officials rescind authorization for the shots and refrain from approving any Covid vaccine in the future.
Just six months earlier, Mr. Trump had declared the Covid vaccines a miracle. At the time Mr. Kennedy filed the petition, half of American adults were receiving their shots. Schools were reopening and churches were filling.
Estimates had begun to show that the rapid rollout of Covid vaccines had already saved about 140,000 lives in the United States.
The petition was filed on behalf of the nonprofit that Mr. Kennedy founded and led, Children’s Health Defense. It claimed that the risks of the vaccines outweighed the benefits and that the vaccines weren’t necessary because good treatments were available, including ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, which had already been deemed ineffective against the virus.
The petition received little notice when it was filed. Mr. Kennedy was then on the fringes of the public health establishment, and the agency denied it within months. Public health experts told about the filing said it was shocking.
John Moore, a professor of immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College, called Mr. Kennedy’s request to the F.D.A. “an appalling error of judgment.” Gregg Gonsalves, an epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health, likened having Mr. Kennedy lead the federal health agencies to “putting a flat earther in charge of NASA.”
Dr. Robert Califf, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, described Mr. Kennedy’s effort to halt the use of Covid vaccines as a “massive error.”
Mr. Kennedy’s transition spokeswoman did not respond to requests for comment, but has said recently that he does not want to take vaccines away.
Asked in November by an NBC reporter about his general opposition to Covid vaccines — and whether he would have stopped authorization — Mr. Kennedy said he was concerned that the vaccines did not prevent transmission of the virus.
“I wouldn’t have directly blocked it,” he said. “I would have made sure that we had the best science, and there was no effort to do that at that time.”
Mr. Kennedy’s early opposition to Covid vaccines has alarmed public health experts, many of whom contend that it should disqualify him from overseeing health agencies with the power to authorize, monitor and allocate funding for millions of vaccines each year.
They are also concerned about how he might handle a possible bird flu pandemic, which could necessitate a rapid deployment of vaccines.
As Mr. Kennedy prepares for his confirmation hearings before two Senate committees, he and his allies have insisted that he is not anti-vaccine.
In fact, in mid-2023, he told a House panel that he had taken all recommended vaccines — except for the Covid immunization.
At his confirmation hearings, he’ll most likely face scrutiny of his broader statements on vaccines, including that the polio vaccine cost more lives than it saved.
Mr. Trump has stepped forward in recent weeks to defend Mr. Kennedy after The New York Times reported that one of Mr. Kennedy’s lawyers had previously petitioned the F.D.A. to revoke approval or pause distribution of several polio vaccines over safety concerns.
“I think he’s going to be much less radical than you would think,” Mr. Trump said last month.
After the Times report, Mr. Trump and Mr. Kennedy expressed their support for the polio vaccine.
If confirmed by the Senate as secretary of the Health and Human Services Department, Mr. Kennedy would assume oversight of $8 billion in funding for the Vaccines for Children program and would have the authority to appoint new members to a panel that makes influential vaccine recommendations to states.
At the time Mr. Kennedy challenged the Covid vaccines, some of his objections touched on wider concerns about their rapid development. Emergency-use authorization — a preliminary form of approval — for immunizations was unusual. Others argued that a public health emergency dictated a speedier rollout.
Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University School of Public Health, said it would be reasonable to debate whether Covid vaccines should have been subject to additional study.
But she profoundly disagreed with Mr. Kennedy’s views, saying that “the idea that in early 2021 that you could be saying that people over the age of 65 don’t need Covid vaccines — that’s just nuts.”
Vaccines have rare side effects, and there have been cases of injury from the Covid shots. Government officials weigh the harms against the potential to save lives. An estimate released in early 2024 found that the Covid vaccines and mitigation measures saved about 800,000 lives in the United States.
Another study found that in late 2021 and 2022, Covid death rates among unvaccinated people were 14 times the rates of those who had received a Covid booster shot. Researchers also estimated that from May 2021 through September 2022, more than 230,000 deaths could have been prevented among people who declined initial Covid inoculations.
From the start of the Covid vaccine campaign, Mr. Kennedy’s view that the Covid vaccines were dangerous put him at odds with Mr. Trump, whose Operation Warp Speed to develop the vaccines was one of his policy triumphs. And Mr. Kennedy went on a concerted campaign against the vaccine.
Mr. Kennedy told Louisiana lawmakers in late 2021 that the Covid vaccine was the “deadliest vaccine ever made.”
He has remained a plaintiff in a lawsuit against President Biden and others, contesting efforts by government officials to limit his ability to suggest on social media that Covid vaccines were not safe.
In January 2021, Mr. Kennedy suggested on Facebook that the death of the baseball legend Hank Aaron, 86, was related to a Covid vaccine he had received 17 days earlier. It was “part of a wave of suspicious deaths” following Covid vaccines, he claimed. A doctor who was vaccinated alongside Mr. Aaron and the county medical examiner dismissed the claim.
In May, when Mr. Kennedy petitioned the F.D.A. to “immediately remove Covid vaccines from the market,” he was joined by Dr. Meryl Nass, a member of the Children’s Health Defense scientific advisory board and a physician in Maine.
Her medical license was initially suspended on an emergency basis in early 2022 for prescribing ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine to patients with severe cases of Covid, including one who was intubated, Maine medical board records show.
She later sued the board, claiming that it retaliated against her for exercising her right to free speech. The case is pending.
In 2022, Mr. Kennedy and others filed a lawsuit against the F.D.A. on behalf of Children’s Health Defense and parents who said they were concerned that their children would be given Covid vaccines without their knowledge or consent. The amended lawsuit, filed in July 2022, sought a court order requesting that the agency reconsider granting authorization for Pfizer and Moderna Covid vaccines for children.
A Texas appeals court dismissed the case in early 2024, concurring with a lower court that the plaintiffs did not face a “concrete or imminent” risk of harm. In June, the Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal.
Mr. Kennedy also sent letters to the F.D.A. threatening legal action if vaccine authorizations for children were granted.
Covid vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna for infants and children 6 months to 11 years old remain in use under emergency authorization, according to the F.D.A. Spokesmen for Pfizer and for Moderna said the companies are pursuing full approval for all ages.
Mr. Kennedy claimed in the censorship case that top Biden administration officials had coerced social media platforms to silence him, mostly during the summer of 2021. At the time, vaccine rates were stalling. People who were not vaccinated began to die at higher rates. Some who died were young; their loved ones said they were confused by conflicting messages on social media — or regretted that they had not gotten the vaccine.
Records in the lawsuit outline a briefing that summer with Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary at the time, and Dr. Vivek Murthy, the U.S. surgeon general, both of whom criticized social media companies for allowing the spread of misinformation that was influencing people against vaccination.
“And we can’t wait longer for them to take aggressive action because it’s costing people their lives,” Dr. Murthy said on July 15, 2021.
Mr. Biden expressed outrage the following day, telling reporters that social media companies that hosted vaccine misinformation were “killing people.”
In legal filings, Mr. Kennedy said that he had been named one of the “Disinformation Dozen” by a prominent advocacy group — and that he was one of the people the White House was targeting. Exhibits in the lawsuit show that White House officials leaned on social media companies to take down misinformation.
Within a month, a senior Facebook executive reported to Dr. Murthy that it had removed a number of pages or groups, including Mr. Kennedy’s, court records show.
The Supreme Court dismissed an associated case last summer, and an appeals court dismissed Mr. Kennedy’s case late last year. Lawyers representing Mr. Kennedy and others are still working on obtaining depositions of about 30 people, mostly Biden administration officials.
Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Dylan Freedman contributed reporting.
Business
The Cannabis Industry’s New Best Friend? President Trump
By some measures, the legal cannabis industry is flowering. It has grown to around $30 billion today from less than $20 billion just six years ago. But investors have remained wary of its high taxes, marijuana’s illicit status at the federal level and the operational costs of complying with a patchwork of state regulations.
Now the Trump administration is pushing major policy changes that could hand marijuana companies a huge windfall and unlock new investment in the industry.
Last week, the government relaxed federal controls on medical marijuana. While that does not make medical marijuana legal under federal law, it moves the product from a class of highly addictive drugs, such as heroin, to a category of lower-risk medicines, like prescription Tylenol, that are overseen by the D.E.A. The Trump administration has also started a process to reclassify cannabis more broadly.
For some cannabis businesses, reclassification could cut tax bills in half. Companies that sell marijuana are currently taxed largely on their income, rather than their profits, resulting in effective tax rates of around 70 percent, more than double those of other businesses. Under the new category, those licensed to sell medical marijuana can claim common tax deductions for expenses like rent and payroll, according to accountants and tax lawyers. A broader reclassification would do the same for recreational marijuana.
The Treasury is considering making the tax relief retroactive, which would be a boon for the industry. Legal cannabis companies owed the Internal Revenue Service $2.24 billion in 2025, according to Whitney Economics, a cannabis research firm. A handful of publicly traded companies, including Trulieve, Florida’s largest medical cannabis company, and Curaleaf, a global juggernaut based in New York, owed more than $1.6 billion in federal taxes, according to their financial disclosures.
It is unclear how the change would be put in place and how extensively businesses would benefit. The Treasury and Internal Revenue Service have yet to issue guidance, though the Drug Enforcement Administration has begun allowing businesses to register with the agency. And there are questions about how the many businesses that sell both medical and recreational cannabis will be treated.
“I’m ecstatic that this happened,” Joe Andreae, the chief executive of CULTA, a cannabis company in Maryland that sells both recreational and medical marijuana. “But it creates a challenge. Will they force us to actually delineate?”
Despite the confusion, and the exclusion of recreational marijuana, many in the industry have welcomed the administration’s acknowledgment of the medical benefits of cannabis as a meaningful first step toward broader reform and public acceptance.
Patrick Rea, the managing director of Poseidon, a cannabis-focused venture capital firm, said the tax relief will make the industry more attractive to investors. “The upshot here for investors is that you can invest and get a return,” he said.
A windfall in sight
Nationally, cannabis businesses are facing rising supply-chain costs, and a glut of legal crops is driving down prices. Beau Whitney, an economist specializing in cannabis, said that 24 of the 40 states that have legalized medical or recreational marijuana, or both, saw revenues decline in 2025.
A big tax break could offer significant help. Austin Ownbey, a Washington, D.C.-based partner at Akerman LLP, said the tax break will make some businesses profitable or more profitable.
Many cannabis companies have delayed filing taxes in anticipation of rescheduling. Jeffrey Schultz, a cannabis lawyer at Foley Hoag LLP in New York, said that he was advising clients who have been granted extensions from the I.R.S. to consider holding off longer, while telling those that have filed already to think about amending their returns. “They may not owe that money,” he said.
Paying less in taxes could help cannabis companies fund research required for marijuana to gain approval from the Food and Drug Administration, which would make it legal to prescribe at the federal level.
The chief executives of Trulieve, Curaleaf and Tilray, a New York-based alcohol and pharmaceutical company with cannabis operations in Canada, said in interviews that they wanted to invest in research to gain approval for cannabis-based treatments for cancer, nerve pain and seizures.
Kim Rivers, the chief executive of Trulieve, said rescheduling cannabis was a long overdue step that recognizes how much the industry has evolved. Rivers was instrumental in persuading President Trump to issue an executive order last December directing the Department of Justice to quickly reclassify marijuana.
“This is not some plants in a closet or on a dirt floor,” she said in an interview. “This is real, regulated, highly nuanced business. Millions of Americans are finding relief and want to have assurance that these products are backed by real research in the United States.”
Left out
It came as a surprise to many in the industry that recreational marijuana was left out of the initial rescheduling. Shawn Hauser, the co-chair of the cannabis practice at Vicente LLP, based in Colorado, said the treaty powers that the Trump administration used to bypass the bureaucratic rule-making process allowed the reclassification only of medical cannabis.
The Trump administration is seeking the same change for recreational marijuana at a hearing scheduled to begin on June 29. But it is certain to be opposed by anti-legalization groups like Smart Approaches to Marijuana, which led opposition that ultimately derailed an earlier attempt to reschedule marijuana under President Biden.
Businesses that sell cannabis solely for adult recreational use are worried that the new rules for medical marijuana could put them at a competitive disadvantage.
That includes Beak & Skiff, a 115-year old apple orchard in New York that makes a line of cannabis and hemp products called Ayrloom. In addition to the possibility of being excluded from rescheduling, the company is preparing for a looming national ban on hemp products containing more than .4 milligrams of THC per container. For Beak & Skiff, the ban would reduce the number of states in which it sells hemp from 13 states to just one, New York.
“It feels like we’re just getting crushed in the middle of two things,” Eddie Brennan, the company president, said.
Hurdles remain
Moving medical marijuana to a lower-risk category does not make it legal, which would require either an act of Congress, F.D.A. approval or removal from the federal controlled substances list. Companies will still contend with the legal risks associated with cannabis that have kept banks, institutional investors and insurance companies on the sidelines, leaving them with limited access to financial services and higher borrowing costs.
The effect can be seen at the dispensary register, where consumers are required to pay with cash or PIN debit because major payment processing companies like Visa and Mastercard do not allow cannabis transactions. Even the Drug Enforcement Administration is requiring the medical cannabis businesses now seeking federal registration to submit their application fees using PayPal or bank transfer.
Efforts in Congress to pass legislation providing protections for federally regulated financial institutions that serve state-licensed businesses have been unsuccessful so far.
It is also unclear how rescheduling will interact with state laws.
“There’s just a lot of questions, a lot of murkiness,” Whitney, the economist, said, adding: “The devil’s in the details.”
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Spirit Airlines is preparing to shut down. The distressed airline, which has filed for bankruptcy twice in the last two years, had been hoping to secure a $500 million loan from the government before running out of funds. But the deal fell apart as some of Spirit’s investors and some Republican lawmakers opposed it.
Fed drama continued. Kevin Wash, Trump’s nominee for Fed chair, cleared an important Senate Banking Committee vote and is expected to be confirmed in time for the next Fed meeting in June. The Fed voted on Wednesday to keep rates unchanged at a range of 3.5 to 3.75 percent, and the current chair, Jerome Powell, announced that he will break with tradition to remain a governor at the central bank after his term as chair ends on May 15.
A.I. spending set a record. Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta reported more than $130 billion in quarterly capital expenditures on Wednesday, about 70 percent more than they spent in the same quarter last year.
The F.C.C. ordered a review of ABC’s broadcast licenses. The extraordinary order came amid a fight between President Trump and Jimmy Kimmel over a joke by the late-night host and represented an escalation by the Trump administration to punish media outlets for their coverage. It faces long odds in court.
More big deals: Bill Ackman’s new fund had a lukewarm I.P.O. PayPal is said to be spinning out Venmo. G.D.P. grew 2 percent in the first three months of the year. And the Senate banned its members from trading on prediction markets.
Taylor Swift’s deepfake defense
A.I. threatens the business of being a celebrity, and Taylor Swift’s legal team just set up a new layer of defense. Last week, the artist filed applications to trademark snippets of her voice and a photo of herself, which lawyers who specialize in intellectual property say could help build a legal argument against unauthorized deepfakes. The actor Matthew McConaughey has made similar moves.
DealBook’s Sarah Kessler talked with Josh Gerben, the head of a trademark-focused law firm that was one of the first to point out the applications, about Swift’s legal strategy. The conversation has been condensed and edited.
How do these trademarks potentially help in a case over deepfakes?
One potential defense is right to publicity law, which basically says, I can’t put Taylor Swift’s image on a T-shirt and go sell it, because that would violate her right to exploit her name, image and likeness. If I were to take her voice and make a new song, I’m arguably violating her right to publicity.
But courts haven’t really looked at this yet. So we’re not sure how they would view it.
Now you’re also trying to trademark the voice to have another cause of action, where you could say, by using my voice, you’re also violating my trademark rights.
Is there something about trademark law that makes it particularly useful in this context?
Trademark law gives you the ability to police against anything that’s confusingly similar. So it doesn’t even have to be an identical copy, or it doesn’t have to actually be Taylor or her voice. It could just be something that’s similar to that. So it’s arguably a little bit of broader protection.
Why haven’t we seen a big lawsuit over celebrity deepfakes yet?
It looks like everybody’s kind of setting up. You’re going to be testing novel legal theories and you want to make sure that if you’re actually going to spend the time and money to litigate it, that you have a really good chance of setting a good precedent.
Because the last thing you want to do is lose and set a bad precedent, where then it just becomes kind of open season on your intellectual property.
Are your clients worried about this?
Even brand owners are starting to pay attention, because you could use A.I. to create fake advertisements that say something that’s untrue or derogatory about a brand.
Quiz: Palantir’s new merch
This question comes from a recent Times article. Click an answer to see if you’re right. (The link will be free.)
On Thursday, the technology company Palantir added a new product to its online store that Eliano Younes, the company’s head of strategic engagement, told The Times was intended to demonstrate a commitment to “re-industrializing America.” What was it?
Business
California gained jobs in March as unemployment rate drops to 5.3%
California added 28,700 payroll jobs in March, lowering its unemployment rate to 5.3% despite a series of high-profile layoffs that have rocked the tech sector.
The gains were driven by nearly 28,000 jobs in the health services and private education sectors, according to figures released Friday by the state’s Employment Development Department.
However, the growth was inflated by the return of thousands of Kaiser Permanente workers who had been on strike in California and Hawaii. But jobs were added in long-term care, in home healthcare and at practitioners’ offices too.
“As we’ve seen throughout the post-pandemic period, healthcare was the big gainer among sectors,” said Michael Bernick, a former director of the state jobs agency.
Health services and private education has gained 160,400 workers since March 2025, according to the EDD.
Recording small gains too were the government, construction and financial sectors, though employment was lower than a year ago.
The job growth since February helped push the state’s unemployment rate down from 5.4% in January and February. Last year, it topped out at 5.6% and it was last at 5.3% in May 2025.
The state jobs picture still lags behind the nation, which recorded a 4.3% unemployment rate in March, when employers added 178,000 jobs.
However, California no longer has the highest state unemployment rate in the nation. It is now surpassed by Delaware at 5.4%. The rate drop was not all good news, though.
Total civilian employment — which includes agricultural workers and the self employed — fell by 39,600 jobs. That was exceeded by a decline of 56,700 workers in the labor force, driving down the unemployment rate.
Bernick said the decline in the labor force could reflect workers moving to other states and the federal crackdown on undocumented workers.
In California, major tech firms have laid off thousands of workers over the last few years. Just this month, Facebook owner Meta; L.A.’s Snap, operator of Snapchat; and corporate database behemoth Oracle announced more.
Hollywood studios also have been laying off thousands of workers amid a wave of consolidation and a slowdown in streaming film production. Disney is expected to lay off as many as 1,000 workers in the coming weeks.
Bernick said that while the layoffs have attracted widespread attention, they account for only a fraction of California’s large economy.
In December, 1.3% percent of workers were laid off in California, a number that has grown since July 2022 when it was 0.6%, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
However, the latest figure is in line with rates over the last 25 years, with the exception of the recession in June 2009 and the pandemic in May 2020 when it was markedly higher, the data show.
Helping prop up the state’s economy is the massive investment in AI taking place in Silicon Valley — even as companies cite it as a reason for their layoffs — and the resurgent defense and aerospace sectors in Southern California.
Business
Schwab Affiliate Halts Customer Donations to Southern Poverty Law Center
The donor-advised fund affiliated with Charles Schwab, DAFgiving360, has suspended account holders’ ability to give money to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights group.
Last week, the Justice Department indicted the group and accused it of financial crimes. This week, the donor-advised funds that bear Fidelity’s and Vanguard’s names also cut the group off.
A spokeswoman for the Schwab-affiliated fund said, “If a governing body of a charity declares an investigation into a charity it oversees, DAFgiving360 may suspend grants to the organization.” She would not provide a list of other organizations that it has suspended.
Donor-advised funds allow individuals to create accounts, donate cash or securities into them and take a tax deduction for the full amount that year. Then they can parcel out donations to charities and other nonprofits over many years.
“Giving to your favorite charity has never been easier” is the language that DAFgiving360 uses on its website. Charles Schwab lists the account balance right next to investment account balances on its own website.
DAFgiving360 is also careful, however, to use specific language that gets to the legal reality of how the funds work. Users can “recommend” grants to “eligible” charities, for example, which means DAFgiving360 controls the money and the account holder is technically just advising.
This is almost never a practical issue for account holders; donor-advised funds generally rubber-stamp donation requests. But in the wake of the criminal indictment, which accused the S.P.L.C. of paying informants money that contributed to the extremism that it opposes, President Trump said he believed that the S.P.L.C. was behind the racist Charlottesville, Va., riots in 2017.
Mr. Trump did not provide evidence for his allegations against the center. And many Fidelity and Vanguard customers are furious about the move against the S.P.L.C.
DAFgiving360 customers are expressing similar sentiments. “This is too safe a position, and they shouldn’t have done it,” Jani Rachelson, a retired labor lawyer in New Jersey who was unable to donate to the S.P.L.C., said of Schwab’s action. “Compliance in advance is the scourge of our life these days.
DAFgiving360 said in its statement that it applies its policies consistently across all charitable organizations, regardless of political viewpoint or orientation. In the past, a Schwab predecessor charitable-fund entity stopped granting money to National Rifle Association-affiliated charities when an active investigation was underway. The N.R.A. does appear in DAFgiving360 search results now for people making grant requests.
Prudent trustees with decision-making authority do consider indictments of charities before approving donations to them.
At Merrill Lynch, however, the donor-advised fund operation relies on the Internal Revenue Service for guidance. Since the agency hasn’t revoked S.P.L.C.’s nonprofit status, Merrill Lynch’s donor-advised funds are allowing donations to go through for now.
Meanwhile, Fidelity’s, Schwab’s and Vanguard’s actions raise complicated questions.
“Why not other charities that have also been attacked by the administration, including many major universities,” said Roger Colinvaux, a nonprofit law expert and professor at Catholic University’s Columbus School of Law, via email. “The incident thus raises questions of how DAF sponsors draw the line and whether they are succumbing to political pressure or advancing their mission.”
In March, the Justice Department filed a civil lawsuit against Harvard University, accusing it of civil rights violations and saying it “tolerated antisemitic mobs of students.” As of Friday morning, the “recommend a grant” page of the DAFgiving360 website returned many options from a “Harvard University” search.
-
Kansas5 minutes agoKansas City, Missouri, police searching for 30-year-old missing man
-
Kentucky11 minutes agoAnna Nicole Smith’s lookalike daughter turns heads in dramatic new look at Kentucky Derby as stars take over
-
Louisiana17 minutes agoAbortion pill dispute returns to Supreme Court
-
Maine23 minutes agoMaine fishermen’s bodies are breaking down. Where’s the help? | Opinion
-
Maryland29 minutes ago7 Delightful Towns to Visit in Maryland
-
Michigan35 minutes agoUCLA baseball scores four runs late for win over Michigan State
-
Massachusetts40 minutes agoThese 9 Towns in Massachusetts Have Beautiful Architecture
-
Minnesota47 minutes agoKids in Need Foundation provides $1 million in school supplies to Minnesota teachers