MAHA Health Report

MAHA Health Report

Make America Healthy Again commission leaders discuss the first health report. Read the transcript here.

MAHA commision speaks to press.
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Donald Trump (00:00):

Scott Turner, Linda McMahon, Doug Collins, Doug Burgum, Lori Chavez-DeRemer. You're doing a very good job, Lori, considering she's a Democrat, you know. The unions, they said she's really good. I did it. I took a lot of heat for doing it. And then they were all saying what a great job we did. Now everybody's happy with you. Great job. Thank you very much. As well as EPA administrator, Lee Zeldin, budget director Russ Vought, SBA administrator, Kelly Loeffler. Kelly's been amazing. She runs Small Business, which is actually the biggest business there is, right? She had no idea how big… she's doing great. FDA Commissioner, Dr. Marty Makary. Thank you, Marty. NIH Director, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. Thank you very much, Jay. Thank you. And let's see who do we have here? CMS administrator, Dr. Mehmet Oz, a tremendous guy actually. Thank you very much.

(01:14)
A friend of mine, a really great senator, Roger Marshall. Roger, thank you. Governors Mike Braun, Jim Pillen, Patrick Morrissey. Representative Vern Buchanan. Former speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich. Newt, a very quiet man. Excited man. Nice to see you, Newt. Four months ago I created the Presidential Commission to Make America Healthy Again, and today the commission officially delivers its first report on childhood health. Here are just some of the alarming findings, and they really are alarming. It's unbelievable. Terrible.

(01:54)
More than 40% of American children now have at least one chronic health condition. Since 1970 rates of childhood cancer have soared in many cases by nearly 50%. 50. 50%. Wow. In the 1960s, less than 5% of the children were obese. Now, over 20% are obese. A few decades ago, think of this one, this is to me the one that gets me every time and it seems to be getting worse. Just a few decades ago, one in 10,000 children had autism. Today it's one in 31. Last time I heard the number, it was one in 34, right? Now it's one in 31. There's something wrong and we will not stop until we defeat the chronic disease epidemic in America. We're going to get it done.

(02:45)
For the first time ever, this report examines some of the root causes that many believe are making our children sicker and our population sicker, I guess. It just doesn't stop with the children. It's our population also, such as the ultra processed foods over- medicalization and over-prescription and widespread exposure to potentially toxic chemicals. Unlike other administrations, we will not be silenced or intimidated by the corporate lobbyists or special interests. And I want this group to do what they have to do. We have to spell it out. In some cases, it won't be nice or it won't be pretty, but we have to do it.

(03:23)
When you hear 10,000… it was one in 10,000 and now it's one in 31 for autism. I think that's just a terrible thing. It has to be something on the outside. It has to be artificially induced. It has to be. And we'll not allow our public health system to be captured by the very industries it's supposed to oversee. So we're demanding the answers. The public is demanding the answers, and that's why we're here.

(03:50)
Already, we're phasing out eight of the most common artificial food dyes and we ended the most serious conflicts of interest at the FDA. We had a lot of conflicts over there. Earlier this week, we approved a SNAP waiver request from Nebraska so they can stop taxpayer dollars from being used to make our children obese. I understand requests from three more states will be approved shortly and more are expected to come in the following weeks. Over the next 80 days, the commission will build on its work in this report to develop a roadmap to bold and transformative public health reforms for our consideration. It's a consideration and we'll lay out the facts.

(04:42)
Let me say congratulations to the entire MAHA movement. This movement has become very hot. People are really, I'll tell you, they're going crazy over MAHA. They're going crazy, right? And I look forward to continuing the historic progress. And I will say this, this whole group, this whole table, they're very… you know, I use a word it's… because it's a beautiful word actually. The Democrats took it and they used it. Instead of the word liberal, they use the word progressive. And normally, I'd say you're very progressive, meaning you're far… They're not progressive. You are progressive.

Brooke Rollins (05:21):

We're taking it back.

Donald Trump (05:22):

They shouldn't be allowed to use that word.

Brooke Rollins (05:25):

That's right. That's right.

Donald Trump (05:26):

And so therefore, I'm not going to use it to describe you, but you are far forward thinkers. You're amazing thinkers and we appreciate having you. It's just tremendous talent around this table. The most respected people anywhere in the world actually. And I've been a fan of Bobby for years. He came up to see me 13, 14, 15 years ago, I remember. And he left and I made a couple of the statements that he made because I agreed with the same thing and we both went through hell. Do you remember that?

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (05:59):

I do remember that.

Donald Trump (05:59):

It was a massive… But you know what? We turned out to be right. It was sort of interesting. But I've been a friend of Bobby and he's been a foe too. He's tried to stop a couple of my jobs. In one case, he did stop a job and I was really angry. And then about four months later, we went into a depression and I saved a hell of a lot of money by the fact that you stopped me from finishing.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (06:21):

You're welcome.

Donald Trump (06:22):

So I never minded. I always said, "Thank you very much for stopping that big job I was going to do." But he's a fantastic guy, and Bobby, we're with you all the way, and your beautiful wife is sitting in the front row and she's always been right there with you. And it was very interesting. When Bobby came, I really wanted Bobby to join and he was doing very well as a candidate, really well. He was being treated very unfairly by the other side, but he was doing so well that they treated you unfairly. They had no choice.

(06:53)
I think they said in order to qualify, Newt, you had to have 80% of the vote. Okay? Do you remember that deal? You had to have 80% of the vote in order to qualify to run against Joe Biden.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (07:04):

Yeah.

Donald Trump (07:04):

And Bobby thought that was a little unfair, and that was about it. And he came on board and we got very lucky. But you really helped, and I want to thank you very much, really. We're with you all the way. Thank you very much. So Bobby, give them your thoughts, please.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (07:24):

Well, thank you very much, Mr. President. I do want to say something because I get a lot of credit for steering this administration toward the MAHA movement, but I joined the campaign in August. I joined President Trump in August and went from Independent to his campaign. But it was in June, he made a speech specifically on this issue. It was a MAHA speech before MAHA existed, and I took note of that speech at the time and thought there's a potential here for a common ground.

(08:01)
I want to thank you for your vision, for your courage, for standing up. President Trump is a populist president. He's a president… he's blamed for giving money to billionaires and all this stuff. We hear about that all the time. But he is on the side of the middle class, the working class, the poor in this country. And I've been following… I've met every president since my uncle was president, and I've never seen a president, Democrat or Republican, that is willing to stand up to industry when it's the right thing to do, and they're willing to talk about really difficult issues and to hold his stand on those issues. I've never seen anything like it, and I'm very, very grateful to you.

(08:55)
I've sat with industry again and again in a room with him and heard him say, "We can't do that. We're going to do something different." Deliver news that they didn't want to hear. So I'm grateful to this. This is a milestone. Never in American history has the federal government taken a position on public health like this. And because of President Trump's leadership, it's not just one cabinet secretary, it's the entire government that is behind this report.

(09:28)
And I can say, again, I talked a little bit about when I met Rachel Carson as a boy. My uncle tried to do this, but he was killed and it never got done. And ever since then, we've been waiting for a president who would stand up and speak on behalf of the health of the American people and say there is no difference between good economic policy, good environmental policy, and good public health policy and good industrial policy. We can have all of them.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (10:00):

… we need a united cabinet and we need to go forward as a single people. I want to thank you for that, President Trump.

Donald Trump (10:07):

Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (10:18):

At its core, this report is a call to action for common sense. We've relied too much on conflicted research, ignored common sense, or what some would call mother's intuition. It's common sense that ultra-processed nutrient-poor food contributes to chronic disease. It's common sense that excessive screen time and isolation lead to anxiety and depression, especially in children. It's common sense that exercise and healthy foods should come before prescriptions and surgery. It's common sense that not all calories are equal in nutritional value. It's common sense that overmedicating kids is dangerous. It's common sense that we can celebrate the innovations of modern life while also demanding fearless inquiry into ameliorating the negative effects of medication, agriculture, and environmental practices.

(11:14)
It's common sense that research funded by corporations deserves more scrutiny than independent studies. I'm so proud of this cabinet and particularly Secretary Rollins and Administrator Zeldin, who again, I'll say it a third time, worked late, late nights early into the morning to make this happen and to all the leadership from the White House staff, beginning with Stephen Miller and Heidi Overton, Dr. Heidi Overton with Vince Haley. Their leadership in their steady hand in getting us to the goal line was we could not have done it without them. They helped us grapple with weighty issues and committed this administration to solving large, complex challenges like children's health.

(12:09)
We're joined here by senators, advocates, governors who I have worked with and CEOs who I know who are all ready to begin carrying out this mission. This is the beginning of a conversation, a national conversation that we are going to have with maturity with nuance. For the first time in history, thanks to your leadership, President Trump. There is a reason that the MAHA moms decided with you, President Trump. It's because this administration has the bravery to tell the truth and solve problems through innovation and not nanny state regulation. President Trump, I'm honored to present you the MAHA report and work with this incredible cabinet that you have brought together to make our children healthy again.

Brooke Rollins (13:15):

Three things. First, on behalf of an extremely grateful nation and on behalf of a lot of extremely grateful ha moms who are out there, Secretary Kennedy and Mr. President, thank you. I see a MAHA mom and grandma and our amazing chief of staff right there, Susie Wiles. I see a MAHA mom and Karoline Leavitt and all across our cabinet. Sir, my oldest son Luke is here. Stand up, Luke. I am a MAHA mom of four and this hits particularly close to home for every single one of us in this room. That's the first thing.

(13:55)
The second thing is that you mentioned, sir, in your remarks that we are on track to sign multiples of SNAP waivers to get junk food and sugary drinks out of our food stamp system. And I am so proud to announce that on Monday I was in Nebraska with Governor Pillen where we signed the first one. An hour ago, I signed the second one for Governor Braun in Indiana. He may not even know that I've got it right here, sir. I also signed the third one, Governor Kim Reynolds of Iowa about an hour ago. With a half a dozen more coming down the line. And sir, that has never happened before. Under Republican or Democrat administrations, we have never made that happen before. So I am so proud and so grateful for your leadership.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (14:58):

And we have Governor Morrisey, who is the first one to apply from West Virginia.

Brooke Rollins (15:00):

Oh, Governor Morrisey. We will make sure you're at the top of the pile, sir. I apologize. Governor Sanders has been a leader, Governor Polis from Colorado. It has been remarkable how these governors have stood up. That's the second thing. The third and final thing, sir, is we all know that at the center of making America healthy again is making American agriculture great again. Without American agriculture at the center of this discussion, we have the most robust, the safest, the best agriculture system in the world and in partnership with the amazing Secretary Kennedy and all of these incredible patriots sitting around this table, under the leadership of the extraordinary President Donald J. Trump, we will make America healthy again. And what an honor it is to be a part of that. Thank you, sir.

Donald Trump (16:12):

Mr. policy, will you say something? Big, big policy man here.

Vince Haley (16:19):

So much has already been said, but in your remarks, Mr. President, you made clear-

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (16:24):

This is Vince Haley by the way.

Vince Haley (16:27):

In your remarks and in the report, it's very clear that there are no sacred cows when it comes to our children's health. We are showing the courage to turn over every stone to figure out, to investigate what is behind the chronic childhood disease crisis. And that's what this report represents, sir.

Donald Trump (16:46):

Thank you, Vince. And by the way, you wanted to have other people speak?

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (16:46):

We've had everybody speak.

Donald Trump (16:46):

Oh, good. Most have already spoken. That's very good. But the fake news wasn't here. What's going on? I mean… Oz, I want to thank you for your work. Do you have anything to say to the media?

Mehmet Oz (17:07):

Thank you, sir. I think it's a moral failing if you don't address this, but it's definitely a financial failing as well. 50% of children are on Medicaid or on the CHIP program. It is an obligation we all have to address this reality. As you know, the cost of Medicaid is going up 50% in five years. I thank you very much for having the bravery to commission this report and Secretary Kennedy, Secretary Rollins, Lee Zeldin, and everybody else on this panel for being able to affect what has not been done since this law for Medicare and medicaid was written in 1965. God bless you.

Donald Trump (17:43):

Thank you very much, Oz. Thank you. A man who's just so highly respected, Dr. Marty Makary, would you say a couple of words please?

Marty Makary (17:56):

Thank you, Mr. President. The United States is the best in the world when it comes to proton beam therapy, CAR-T, sophisticated operations. But when it comes to the health of the population, it's been a 50-year failure and we have got to change course. And it's not until you have had the courage to let us take on these giant issues, as Vince Haley said, without any sacred cows that we've been able to change. And I think this will transform our healthcare system from a reactionary system where doctors are playing whack-a- mole to a proactive system. So thank you, Mr. President.

Donald Trump (18:33):

Thank you very much. Thank you, Marty. A highly respected man. Jay, please say a few words. Thank you.

Jay (18:41):

Thank you, Mr. President. I said earlier already that it's shocking to me that what this report says, which is that our kids will live less long, less healthy, more unhappy lives than we will as parents. We can't have that. I'm so proud to be part of this moment because that doesn't have to be the future. We can change things by doing excellent gold standard science, understanding the root causes of all these problems, reversing it. And Mr. President, this is an enormously important moment because it's from this moment forward, we will reverse course so our kids will live longer than us, will live more healthy than us, and we'll be happier than we have been. Thank you.

Donald Trump (19:30):

Thank you very much. Thank you, Jay. Good job. I have to say we have the greatest farmers in the world and we love our farmers and we want to pay respect to our farmers, and we always will. And we won the farmers by a lot in the election and every election, all three elections, and we won by a lot. And I will never forget that. And they are foremost in our thought. And representing I think the farmers better than just about anybody can do is Senator Roger Marshall. Could you say a couple of words, Roger, please?

Roger Marshall (00:00):

Roger Marshall (20:01):

Mr. President, we're not tired of winning yet. Congratulations. What a week you've had overseas, one win after another. One Big Beautiful Bill across the House floor this morning. You're the best closer in the game. And this is one of the greatest days of my life, professionally speaking as well. And I just want to acknowledge my MAHA mom out here as well. That my wife Lena, was a MAHA nurse and a MAHA mom and a MAHA grandma. Now Lena, will you please stand up as well, my wife? Mr. President, you know, I spent 25 years delivering babies most every day. We saw a huge epidemic of diabetes of pregnancy, and this has exploded in so many different directions now. We have an epidemic in mental health in our youth. Obesity rates 20, 30%. 20% of our children on a prescription drug, 60, 70% of adults on a prescription drug. We can do better than this. And it does start with the farmer. It starts with soil health. And I just want you to know that our farmers are so committed to this as well. And so many of them are already doing great things. They're making the soil healthier, they're using less pesticides, they're doing all the right things. It's going to take a little bit more effort and time to get everybody with those practices. But the American farmer and rancher were the original environmentalists, the original conservationists, and they'll be right here working beside us, and we appreciate your support of them as well.

Donald Trump (21:29):

Thank you, Rodger. Great, thank you.

(21:36)
So I think I'll close by just saying that something happened a week ago that was very, very important, profound, but very important in so many ways. For years, I noticed that other countries paid much less for drugs and pharmaceuticals than we did. But I don't mean 2% less or 10%, which would be good, but I don't mean 20 or 25 or 30%. I mean, sometimes we paid 10 times more, 12 times more, 13 times more than other countries, where people from our country would be seen going into Mexico and seen going into other countries, leaving on trips and bringing their drugs home because they'd get… In London, they'd be able to buy a drug for one-tenth the price of what it cost to New York City. And I watched this and I watched it during my term and I didn't like it. I didn't like it.

(22:29)
And it's a very complex system, but we're smart also, maybe much smarter than they are. And at some point we had to figure out. And I heard it was the middleman. Nobody told me who the middleman was. Nobody knew who the middleman was. Nobody ever heard. All I heard is the middleman. I said, "They've got to be the richest people in the world, whoever they are." We don't even know if there is a middleman. All I know is that the drugs were 10 times higher and sometimes more than that. And I really got into it over the last year, and I figured the whole system out. And for various and sundry reasons, the United States of America was being screwed. And we were being taken advantage of and being laughed at for years and years. And I said, "It's not going to happen anymore."

(23:15)
And I brought a great gentleman, the head of Eli Lilly in, who's great. He really is. He is great. He's done a fantastic job. And others also of the companies, and I have it out with them. I had debates with them actually. And pretty much it was a debate that was impossible to lose. You had to be a real bad debater to lose that debate, because they couldn't justify it. They tried to say, "Well, we pay for research and development, and the United States has agreed to pay for 100%." I said, "Why? Why are we paying?" And by the way, that wasn't even the number, because it's still way too high if you took all the research and development. But you have other countries that are a lot more vicious than us in terms of their representatives. And they'd set a price for a drug and they'd say, tell the United States to pay for the rest. We were subsidizing the whole world.

(24:07)
And I said, "We're not going to do that anymore. We've been a laughing stock for so many years." The last four years we've been a laughing stock. I said it. We were laughing stock, and now we're the most respected and we're the hottest country in the world. We're going to remain that way. We're going to do that with drug costs too. And so I said, "I'm going to do something that's a very unpopular thing to do with a small number of people, mainly the people that own the drug companies and others." And I'm not even blaming them. They were able to get away with it. But it was really other nations that took advantage of us because the drug companies were under their thumb. And they would say, this is what I'm going to pay.

(24:45)
And the European Union was right at the top of the list, let me tell you. We're going to pay $20 for this and we're not going to pay anymore. And America would pay $240 for the same thing that they're paying 20. They said, "Tell America to pay for the rest." So for years, they went along aimlessly and they did it. And I started making changes. And I'll never forget the end of my first term, which was very successful, we had the best stock market ever. We had the best economy ever of any president. We went up 88% in the stock market as an example. And I think 116% in one of the other indices. And we had, we're doing well, but I never… This whole thing with the drug costs always bothered me. And I started really studying it and it's very complicated stuff. And I said, "You know what? We are paying so much more." And I demanded favored nations.

(25:38)
We're the biggest buyer, we're the best buyer. We're the most solid buyer. We're the one that paid for all of the research and development. And they said, "We're going to do something that's earth-shattering." So at the end of my first term, I was so proud because it's the first time in 28 years that any president reduced drug prices during the course of four years. And you know what the number was? One-fourth of 1%, but it was down, one-fourth, think of it, a quarter of 1%, very little. Essentially, they remained the same. But I wanted to get it down. And I was so proud. I thought I was the greatest guy in the world. I could get down one quarter of a percent. And I had news conferences, I was bragging. I'm the only one that did it 28 years. And then I said, "That's not very much." Because we were still paying so much more.

(26:30)
And I decided I've got to break the system. And it's the most powerful lobby in the world, the drug company, the most powerful. They are the most powerful. And I'm not saying bad, good, I'm not saying anything, but they have tremendous power over the Senate, over the House, over the governors, over everybody. And they spend more money, billions and billions of dollars. And I said, "I don't care. I have to do what's right." And I declared a favor nations, most favorite nations, where the United States from now on is going to pay the exact same price as the lowest price anywhere in the world. In other words, if you take… In other words, if you take the country that's paying, and let's say in a certain part of, there may be some country out there that pays a little bit less for very good reasons because of the fact, a thing called poverty or whatever, but we take the lowest countries, say European Union countries as a whole, that would be fine, or take individual countries within the European Union or take various countries that nobody's even heard about, we pay the lowest.

(27:48)
And what that's going to mean, and I'd like to put somebody to police it because it should start immediately. It shouldn't start in two years, three years, five years. They'll say yes, it kicks in. They always say, kicks in, Marty. It kicks in, sir, in four years. And then four years, they get it changed. It should mean, so remember I told you I was happy with one quarter of 1%, it could mean anywhere from 70% to 89% reduction in drugs and pharmaceuticals. I've actually had some congressmen call me and they say, "Sir, can we talk about this?" I said, "No." They wanted to talk because it's tremendous power against them. And I understand that. And every one of them was covered.

(28:36)
Senators were, I see Roger smiling, and Roger probably was too. But you know what? He wants to do the right thing. Right? He wants to do the right thing, and we're doing the right thing. We were taken advantage of. And forget the drug companies, we were taken advantage of by other countries that insisted with the drug companies that they were going to pay X dollars and we're not paying any more. And you're not doing business here. And they were nasty about it because these people were almost sort of afraid of them. And we are going to now get a reduction in drug costs of up to 89% in some cases, but 50% would be a low, a bad number.

(29:12)
So think of that 50% versus one quarter of 1%. Think of that, 85, 89, 91, 72%, it's going to be massive numbers. It's going to be incredible for Medicaid, incredible for all forms of healthcare. Medicare is going to be, it's going to have a huge impact, so big that nobody can calculate it. I mean, this thing could drop by 25, 30%. The drugs are a very big part of it. Right? So very big part. So it'll affect everything. It'll affect your whole life. The amount of money you're going to be saving is going to be incalculable. Nobody can believe I had the courage to do it. I don't think it's courage. I think it would've been courage not to do it. I tell you what, not to do it, would've taken far

Donald Trump (30:00):

… more courage, because I was tired of it. And I was listening to these guys and they make a lot of money every year, millions and millions of dollars a year. And I agree, because at the beginning, because of the complexity, you'd walk out of a room, you'd hear them talking, and they almost convinced you that it's a great system, it's a wonderful system, even though we were paying 10 times more. That's why they make $30 million a year because they were good, but not any longer.

(30:25)
And one of them just threw up his hands after I was just pounding on them. And he said, "I can't do it anymore. It's the hardest thing I have to do is trying to justify this damn thing. I can't do it anymore." One of the biggest companies. I just can't do it anymore. You're right. And as soon as he said that, that was incredible because I understood exactly he couldn't do it. He said the hardest thing he had to do is trying to justify why we're paying $200 for something and somebody else is paying $12 that is a neighboring country.

(30:57)
Take Canada. People go up to Canada to shop because their prices are so much less and it's not going to happen anymore. So we're going to take the lowest country anywhere in the world, and that's what we're going to be paying, and we'll be saving from 50 to 89%. And these are big. These are tremendous numbers. There's not going to be anything where we're paying 10 times more than somebody else.

(31:19)
And one thing that is very important, and it's got to be implemented, it's done. I've done the order, it's done. But we have to get somebody that's got a lot of strength and a lot of power because you have to implement it because these countries are going to go down fighting. They don't want this to happen because they're going to go up.

(31:38)
Now, there are many more people involved in the world than there are here. So they'll go up a little bit, maybe 15, 20%, and we're going to go down 60, 70 or 80%. But they will fight the drug companies. The drug companies are very worried that they're going to fight. And that's okay. If they fight, we'll just say, "That's okay. We are not going to let you sell any more cars into the United States, or we're not going to let you sell any more wine or liquor or alcohol or something." That's actually much more important to them than the drugs. And we're going to be able to force that issue if we need to.

(32:14)
They should do it. We're basically equalizing. They should do it. And the drug companies should do just as well. This shouldn't be a hit on their stock. I don't think it will be. It's basically it's going to be the same amount of money, but it's going to be redistributed and it's going to be redistributed. So they're going to pay a little bit more and we're going to pay a lot less, a little bit more because there's so many more. It's a bigger number. And so, probably I'd like to ask you and Dr. Oz and Marty, perhaps, and Jay, and maybe representing the world's politicians, I can ask Roger, who's so great with this whole subject, if you would be very, very tough and very, very powerful in a sense. It's not easy. You're going to have to get this done. The drug companies are going to say, well, they won't do it. And maybe they won't. And if they don't do it, we're going to not do business with that country or those countries. But we're going to have to be very tough until it's totally stabilized and equalized. And Oz, I see your eyes at gleaming because you've been talking about this for a long time, but you've never had anyone willing to do it. But I'm willing to do it. And I think it's going to go down as one of the most important things we've ever done, because drug costs are going down.

(33:28)
Think of it, every year for 21 years, the costs have gone up and now they're going down maybe by 85, 89… I'm telling you, 89% in two instances, 89% cut. Nobody's ever seen anything like it. So I'd like to ask Oz in particular, because you and I know each other, he's a very tough hombre, this one. He's tough as hell. And so, if you can lead the group. And it's not going to be easy. You're going to have to get in and you're going to have to fight. If you do it, you can have, within a period of weeks, you can have drug costs that drop like a rock, okay?

(34:01)
So you as a group, I have great confidence, and if you don't do it, I am firing every single one. Good luck, Oz. All right? You can handle it?

Dr. Oz (34:10):

The companies are all coming in and we've had some very interesting… The companies are all coming in. We've had some very promising interactions. Give me a little time to be a tough hombre.

Donald Trump (34:28):

You'll do a great job. I have no doubt about it. Thank you very much. Any help, I will be there to help you, okay?

Dr. Oz (34:34):

You mentioned something that has not been discussed in the past. People have talked about drug prices in a silo and isolation, but when you start going to the countries where they give discounts to because they're getting beaten up there and you support these companies, they see a huge upside potential and even greater than the numbers you mentioned.

Donald Trump (34:51):

Right.

Dr. Oz (34:51):

They should be able to charge more than what they would historically have been tolerant of if they have the support of the US government than you. And Secretary Kennedy is aware of all these discussions.

Donald Trump (35:01):

Well, they were artificially low and artificially high. We were artificially high. They were artificially low. We're not going to let that, and I think you're going to be able to handle it pretty easily. But speed is very important. We can do this immediately. This doesn't take two years, three years. It doesn't take a month. So do the best you can. Thank you very much. Thank you, everybody. Thank you. Are we concluded, Bobby?

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (35:31):

Yes.

Donald Trump (35:32):

Go ahead. What are the-

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (35:33):

Thank you, Mr. President. Let's all give a hand for President Trump.

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