Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry has urged the U.S. Senate — including specifically Sen. Bill Cassidy, a fellow Republican from Louisiana — to support Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
When President DONALD TRUMP ’s first term ended at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, he was standing at a podium in the briefing room, in the midst of a deadly tragedy, blaming enemies and sparring with reporters as aides looked on. The disease and the deaths played backdrop to Trumpian theater.
Bill Gates said in a recent interview that the chance of another pandemic in the next 4 years is between 10% and 15%.
The talk of the town lately here on The Hayride has been the political future of current US Senator Bill Cassidy. Senator Cassidy can’t seem to stay out of the headlines lately—from some reportedly petty behavior during the Washington DC Mardi Gras ball to his massive fundraising numbers in anticipation of a 2026 reelection campaign.
Bill Gates estimates a 10-15% chance of another pandemic occurring within the next four years, citing unprepared global health infrastructure. Despite lessons from COVID-19, Gates emphasizes ...
Bill Gates said the chance ... Concerns about the next pandemic, and how prepared the world is for it, have been rife since COVID-19 plunged the world into economic and health care turmoil amid ...
With the acute phase of the Covid-19 pandemic fading even as the coronavirus persists and evolves, a new normal is taking shape around the world. Experts expect cases to rise again this winter.
Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates warned the world is still ... million in the U.S. to “help end the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic and prepare for future pandemics.”
Mr Kennedy’s nomination could fail to move forward if Senator Bill Cassidy joins Democrats in voting against him. Read more at straitstimes.com.
If you come out unequivocally — ‘vaccines are safe, it does not cause autism’ that would have an incredible impact,” Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) told the HHS nominee.
A key Republican senator on Thursday said he was struggling with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s nomination by President Donald Trump to run the top U.S. health agency, saying he had reservations about the nominee's "misleading arguments" on vaccines.