Trump Team in Damage Control as White House Aides Shield President From RFK Jr MAHA Storm
Tensions rise as RFK Jr's 'Make America Healthy Again' agenda sparks political concerns ahead of midterms

Mounting frustration inside the White House has forced Donald Trump's team into damage control, as aides quietly move to shield the president from the growing political storm surrounding Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.
Senior officials are increasingly alarmed that Kennedy's controversial 'Make America Healthy Again' (MAHA) agenda could damage Republican prospects ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, with White House aides now scrambling to contain the fallout before it overshadows the president's broader political priorities.
Growing Frustration Inside the White House
White House aides have grown increasingly frustrated with RFK Jr and the political complications his initiatives have created. Trump originally encouraged Kennedy to take bold action after appointing him to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), reportedly telling him to 'go wild on health' and giving the longtime environmental lawyer wide latitude to pursue his policy ideas. Several of those initiatives have since become political liabilities, with officials now fearing the MAHA programme could hurt Republican candidates in competitive races as the midterm cycle approaches.
White House Aides Step In to Shield Trump
The growing controversy has prompted White House aides to intervene more directly in HHS operations, with some Trump advisers taking steps to exert greater control over certain departmental decisions. Polling has played a major role in that strategy, with internal data suggesting that several elements of RFK Jr's messaging, particularly on vaccines, have proved deeply unpopular with the broader electorate. 'Vaccines are not popular issues to talk about,' one administration official said. 'It goes back to polling.'
Policy Missteps Trigger Alarm
Much of the internal frustration stems from a series of high-profile controversies tied to Kennedy's policies. One major flashpoint involved the federal government's response to a measles outbreak, which critics argued was mishandled; another erupted when the department cancelled several grants supporting mental health and substance abuse programmes. In response to the mounting backlash, officials reportedly replaced some of RFK Jr's senior staff with figures more closely aligned with the White House's political strategy.
Trump's Policies Sometimes Clash With RFK Jr.'s Agenda
Complicating matters further are policy disagreements between the president and his own health secretary. In February, Trump signed an executive order boosting domestic production of glyphosate, a herbicide widely used in agriculture and often associated with the brand Roundup, a chemical RFK Jr has long opposed, having built part of his legal career around environmental lawsuits targeting companies that produced it. The decision angered some supporters of the MAHA movement, creating additional political tension inside the administration.
Political Messaging Carefully Managed
The White House has also sought to limit how prominently MAHA priorities appear in presidential messaging. During his recent State of the Union address, Trump avoided discussing several key pillars of RFK Jr's agenda, including plans to eliminate certain pesticides and food dyes, focusing instead briefly on lowering prescription drug prices. Political observers widely interpreted the omission as a further attempt to distance Trump from the most controversial aspects of the health secretary's programme.
Trump Still Publicly Backs RFK Jr
Despite the growing tension, Trump has continued to praise Kennedy publicly. 'He's doing such a fantastic job,' the president said in February. 'Who would've thought a Kennedy — we love a Kennedy — in the Republican Party?' Kennedy reportedly remains personally well regarded by the president even as aides privately express concern about his policies, though the disconnect between Trump's public support and his team's containment efforts has drawn considerable attention. As the midterm elections draw closer, the administration may face increasing pressure to balance Kennedy's ambitious health agenda with the political realities of a deeply divided electorate.
© Copyright IBTimes 2025. All rights reserved.


















