A heated exchange between Pennsylvania Rep. Summer Lee and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at a recent congressional hearing is making the rounds online. The core of their back-and-forth is a question that sounds simple but actually explores a complicated debate in federal health policy: How do you tackle a crisis that impacts a specific group when the government won’t let you even name that group in official language?
The incident took place on April 16, 2026, when Kennedy showed up before the House Ways and Means Committee. That hearing was already making headlines, with Democrats grilling the HHS Secretary about the administration’s proposed 12.5% budget cut to the department, $5 billion of that from the NIH alone.
Summer Lee, representing Pennsylvania’s 12th district and known for speaking out on racial health disparities, used her time to spotlight Black maternal mortality. That crisis, based on data several lawmakers brought up, means Black women in the U.S. are dying from pregnancy-related causes at nearly three times the rate of white women.
Pennsylvania Rep. Lee’s post and official press release make it clear: The Trump administration told federal programs to strip around 200 words and phrases, including “Black”, from funding applications. Against that backdrop, Lee asked a pointed question: “Do you have an idea of how we could solve the Black maternal mortality crisis if we can’t say Black?”
Kennedy shifted the conversation back to the anti-DEI agenda. He said President Trump wants to end division, not create it, and blamed DEI programs for dividing and polarizing people over the last four years. Lee pushed back right away, reminding him they were talking about healthcare, not an ideological debate.
Kennedy stuck with his DEI argument. So Lee pressed further: How can you target spending, research, or intervention toward a population facing disproportionate harm if you won’t even name them? Kennedy insisted the government was meeting its responsibility for maternal health, but Lee shot back bluntly: “We are not.”
Pennsylvania Rep. Summer Lee’s Tense Exchange With RFK Jr. Gets People Talking
Reactions online were pointed and largely one-sided in their frustration with Kennedy’s responses. “Bless her for that immense professionalism and patience she has. I loudly protested in my own car to his answers,” one person wrote on Reddit.
Some used dark humor to underscore the absurdity they saw in the administration’s priorities. “Sorry, no time for healthcare funding. There are raccoon *expletive* that need capturing,” one user wrote, while another added: “Research that involves the chainsawing of whale heads also cannot be ignored at this critical time.”
Others widened the lens on the problem beyond Black women. “It’s not just black, bro. You can’t even say women, you can’t say fetus, you can’t say ANYTHING that alludes to anyone that isn’t white. It’s nuts,” a user commented. Some connected Kennedy’s responses to broader patterns in his record. “RFK Jr perpetuates the racist lie that black people have a higher threshold for pain than white people, but then wants to close any avenue of studies for health aimed at people of color. He’s a racist, full stop,” one person wrote.
Others framed the moment through the lens of Kennedy’s own family history. “I still cannot get over that he’s JFK’s nephew and RFK’s son. It makes me want to believe in an afterlife so they give him an *expletive* whooping for what he’s done to the American people and the Kennedy legacy,” a user commented.
The clip stands out because it doesn’t get lost in the usual chaos of a hearing. It hits a question you can’t answer honestly without admitting either a flaw in the administration’s logic or defending a policy choice that a lot of people just can’t swallow.







