Norms Impact
Healthcare group urges RFK Jr to resign after remarks on cocaine and toilet seats
A cabinet health chief publicly minimized infectious-disease risk with a cocaine-toilet-seat boast, shredding the credibility norm federal public-health leadership relies on to protect us.
Feb 13, 2026
Sources
Summary
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the US health and human services secretary, said he downplayed Covid risk because he is “not scared of a germ” and “used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.” A leading healthcare advocacy group publicly demanded the resignation of a sitting cabinet official over comments that undercut public-health risk communication. The episode deepens institutional distrust at the moment federal guidance depends on credibility to drive vaccination and outbreak response.
Reality Check
When the nation’s top health official treats pandemic risk as a punchline, we lose the baseline of credible, evidence-driven communication that protects our families and our consent to public-health measures. Nothing here, on its face, clearly fits a prosecutable federal crime, but it squarely violates the core governance norm that public power can’t be used to launder misinformation and erode trust in lifesaving policy. The real damage is institutional: if HHS leadership normalizes dismissing disease risk and reframing vaccination as optional during outbreaks, our rights to safe workplaces, schools, and competent government collapse into propaganda and personal branding.
Media
Detail
<p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services, made remarks about Covid risk during the 12 February episode of Theo Von’s podcast <em>This Past Weekend</em>, saying: “I’m not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.”</p><p>Following the podcast, Protect Our Care president Brad Woodhouse issued a one-word statement calling for Kennedy to step down: “Resign.” The organization said the comment reflected concerns about Kennedy’s fitness to lead HHS and referenced the scale of cocaine-related overdose deaths in the US.</p><p>Kennedy linked the remark to his continued attendance at in-person recovery meetings during the pandemic and discussed his past struggles with addiction. The controversy follows earlier criticism during his first year in the Trump White House over his handling of measles outbreaks, his portrayal of measles vaccination as a personal choice, and promotion of unproven treatments. A KFF poll reported that a majority of the public disapprove of his performance and handling of vaccine policy. HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon defended Kennedy’s leadership and said the department would continue its work into 2026.</p>