Politics

RFK Jr. Blasted by Brother for ‘Betraying’ Father’s Legacy

OH BROTHER!

Maxwell Taylor Kennedy has savaged the health secretary in an op-ed.

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 13: President Donald Trump, shakes hands with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. alongside Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Scott Turner (L) after Trump signed the "Fostering the Future" executive order the East Room of the White House on November 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. The executive order, championed by first lady Melania Trump, works to expand opportunities for education, career development, housing and other resources for youth transitioning from foster care to adulthood.  (Photo by Heather Diehl/Getty Images)
Heather Diehl/Getty Images

In celebration of what would have been Robert F. Kennedy’s 100th birthday, Maxwell Taylor Kennedy has penned an op-ed celebrating his father’s legacy—and savaging his brother, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., for tearing it down.

Writing in The Boston Globe, Kennedy explicitly called out President Donald Trump and his administration, saying their policies are in direct opposition to what his father stood for.

“I know, specifically, that [Robert F. Kennedy] would have been appalled by the cruelty the Trump administration has directed toward America’s neediest,” Kennedy wrote.

1968:  Senator Robert Kennedy speaking at an election rally.  (Photo by Harry Benson/Express/Getty Images)
Senator Robert Kennedy speaking at an election rally in 1968. He was assassinated in June the same year. Harry Benson/Getty Images

Speaking to the near-suspension of the SNAP program during the recent government shutdown—which nearly cost 42 million Americans their food assistance—and the alteration to SNAP made by the Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill, Kennedy said attacks on access to welfare are a “betrayal” of RFK.

“It’s a betrayal of all that my father worked for,” Kennedy wrote. RFK, the younger brother of former President John F. Kennedy, advocated for the expansion of JFK’s food stamps pilot program that eventually became SNAP.

“All those complicit in that betrayal have lowered themselves—not least my brother, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s secretary of health and human services, who knows my father’s legacy as well as anyone," Maxwell wrote.

RFK Jr. also celebrated his father’s 100th birthday by sharing an image of the pair of them on his Instagram.

RFK Jr. has served as Trump’s HHS secretary since January and has supported the president’s $33 billion in cuts to health programs while championing the “Make America Healthy Again” movement.

In August, RFK Jr. argued that SNAP recipients are being “poisoned” by sugar and sweet drinks.

Maxwell Kennedy, one of RFK’s 11 children and younger sibling of RFK Jr., is a lawyer who campaigned for Barack Obama in 2008.

He writes that his father was “never the same” after a 1967 trip to the Mississippi Delta, where he witnessed extreme poverty and advocated for the creation of relief programs to alleviate it. He was assassinated in June 1968.

(Original Caption) Senator and Mrs. Robert Kennedy pose with their children after attending Easter Mass. at St.Lukes Catholic Church in nearby McLean, VA. Left to right: Michael: David: Robert: Joseph: Kathleen; Matthew: Kennedy: Christopher: Mrs. Kennedy: And Mary.
Senator and Mrs. Robert Kennedy with their children Michael: David: Robert: Joseph: Kathleen; Matthew: Kennedy: Christopher: Mrs. Kennedy: And Mary., April, 1968. Bettmann/Bettmann Archive

“Today hunger remains an acute problem in America and those programs my father fought for are being dismembered or dismantled,” Maxwell wrote.

“With an almost Dickensian cruelty, the Trump administration is zeroing out funding for the poor, while handing untold riches to itself and to its wealthy donors.”

“This is unacceptable. And it is unacceptable, too, that my brother Bobby stands side by side with Donald Trump as these programs, particularly SNAP, are diminished.

“Preventing hunger is the primary duty of every public health official,” he continued. “You cannot Make America Healthy while denying food to our most vulnerable citizens.”

Kennedy concluded his opinion piece by writing that RFK Jr. saw the gathered mourners as their father’s body passed through Washington, D.C., and ought to remember what motivated them, “Black and white, weary and proud,” to pay tribute.

“My father said: If we cannot prevent our fellow citizens from starving, ‘we must ask ourselves what kind of country we really are.’ Those words are as essential now as they were then.”

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