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Comedian Bill Maher said he was ‘disappointed’ in his friend Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and while it ‘pains’ him to say it, RFK Jr. has ‘got to go.’
Maher, who has welcomed Kennedy multiple times as a guest on his HBO show ‘Real Time’ since 2004, as well as on his podcast Club Random, expressed thoughts on Kennedy’s recent congressional testimony.
‘The knives are out for Bobby Kennedy and I gotta’ say… I’m with the knives. I tried but he was grilled for three hours and it was pretty hard to watch,’ Maher said during his monologue.
The comedian has frequently supported Kennedy’s views on public health, including the belief that the increase in autism rates is linked to ‘toxins’ in the environment, which include food and drug ingredients, pesticides, or pollution.
However, after showing some clips from the hearing, Maher humorously mentioned Kennedy’s strained voice: ‘Poor Bobby, he talked for so long, he gained his voice.’
He then continued to pile on the secretary of health and human services, revealing his hopes for Kennedy’s tenure that have fallen away.
‘I personally find this very disappointing because I am the person who was sympathetic to what he was trying to do,’ Maher said.
‘Many people, like me, who questioned the traditional approach of western medicine—not that we’re opposed to western medicine or vaccines, but there’s a different perspective—finally saw someone like Bobby who cares about these issues. But he’s also just eccentric. He simply does not listen. He just is.’

Liberal comedian Bill Maher expressed his ‘disappointment’ in friend Robert F. Kennedy Jr., admitting that while it ‘pains’ him to say it, RFK Jr. needs to move on.

Maher, who has had Kennedy as a frequent guest on his HBO show ‘Real Time’ dating back to 2004 and his podcast Club Random, reacted to Kennedy’s testimony before Congress earlier this week
He said that Kennedy has been driven too far into his own beliefs and refused to come up with a more moderate position in front of the Senate Finance Committee.
‘I call it pendulumism, nothing ever stops in the middle. Okay, this needed a housecleaning, the CDC. But to fire all 17 of the top people? Now you don’t have that voice in there at all. You just have your voice,’ he said.
Maher concluded: ‘It’s just, he’s got to go and it pains me to say it because I like him.’
As recently as last month, Maher was praising Kennedy to his relative, Hollywood movie star Chris Pratt.
‘I love him. I don’t agree with everything, but I agree with, like, the overall view that what makes us sick is the toxicity,’ Maher said.
‘When he was here, I said my advice to you is like you need to marry your former life more with what you’re doing now. Your former life, you were very admired as an environmental lawyer.’
He even said that despite the outsized caricature of Kennedy as a conspiracy theorist, Maher flatly denied he’s out of the ordinary.
‘And he’s not crazy. I mean the people trying to – he’s also got, like I said to him when he was here, ‘I don’t agree with everything you said, and I don’t think your father would either, but your father would be so proud that you stuck to your guns like more than anybody,’ he told the actor.

As recently as last month, Maher was praising Kennedy to his relative, Hollywood movie star Chris Pratt

Liberal frustration with Kennedy peaked this week after he was called before the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday
Liberal frustration with Kennedy peaked this week after he was called before the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday.
Senators grilled Kennedy over a variety of issues, including his views on vaccines, autism, Medicaid and the state of the Centers for Disease Control.
Key topics of discussion were his dismissal of key CDC vaccine advisors, his firing of CDC Director Susan Monarez a mere month into her tenure and his decision to radically reduce the number of people who are eligible for the most up-to-date COVID-19 vaccines.
Democratic senators were the harshest in their criticism of Kennedy eight months into the job as health secretary, with Sen. Ron Wyden calling him or his past association with Jeffrey Epstein.
‘Mr. Kennedy calls himself a protector of children, some kind of rich claim, coming from someone who has flown on Jeffrey Epstein’s private jet on multiple occasions,’ Wyden noted.
However, Republicans too showed their frustration with Kennedy at times, especially Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana.
Cassidy, a doctor specializing in liver diseases, was the decisive vote that got Kennedy over the finish line in his confirmation hearings back in February.
‘Do you agree with me that President Trump deserves a Nobel Prize for Operation Warp Speed?’ Cassidy asked Kennedy, referring to the public-private partnership between the federal government and pharmaceutical companies that produced a COVID-19 vaccine in record time.
‘Absolutely, senator,’ Kennedy responded.

Kennedy had one of the most contentious back-and-forths with Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado (pictured on the far right)

Key topics of discussion were his dismissal of key CDC vaccine advisors and his firing of CDC Director Susan Monarez (pictured)
Cassidy then pressed Kennedy on supposedly contradicting himself.
‘But you just told Sen. Bennet that the COVID vaccine killed more people than COVID?’ Cassidy said.
‘Wait, I did not say that,’ Kennedy blurted out in protest. ‘I just want to make clear, I did not say that.’
During his exchange with Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado, Kennedy said that the mRNA vaccine has been linked to myocarditis and pericarditis in adolescent and young adult males.
These are both conditions that cause inflammation in the heart, and if it goes untreated, symptoms can begin to mimic a heart attack.
Medical experts agree that the Pfizer and Moderna cases have led to rare cases of myocarditis and pericarditis, but most health organizations agree that the vast majority of these cases are mild and very treatable.
Cassidy also asked Kennedy about his participation in lawsuits that aimed to restrict access to the COVID-19 vaccine.
‘It surprises me that you think so highly of Operation Warp Speed when, as an attorney, you attempted to restrict access.’
RFK again sought to clear the air, ‘I’m happy to explain why…’
Cassidy cut him off, saying he only had three minutes left for his questioning.
As health secretary, Kennedy canceled $500 million of mRNA vaccine research, claiming that 22 projects he terminated failed to ‘protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu’.
In December 2021, Kennedy claimed that the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine was ‘the deadliest vaccine ever made’.