AFL WAG Bec Judd took to social media on Friday to weigh in on American politics.
In the daring publication, the 41-year-old influencer appears to have given her support to the controversial anti-vaccine Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has been chosen as the new United States Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Posting a message from Kennedy to President-elect Donald Trump on her own Instagram stories, Bec captioned the action: ‘Great. “Australia needs its own RFK.”
Kennedy declares himself a scientific skeptic and has created controversy for his views, including linking pharmaceutical therapies to disorders such as autism.
Trump announced Thursday that Kennedy was his nomination for the crucial HHS role.
‘Thank you Donald Trump for your leadership and bravery. “I am committed to advancing your vision of making America healthy again,” Kennedy said in the message Bec shared.
AFL WAG Bec Judd took to social media on Friday to weigh in on American politics. In the daring publication, the 41-year-old influencer appears to have offered her support to the controversial anti-vaccine Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has been elected the new Secretary of Health and Human Services of the United States. Pictured: Bec Judd.
Pictured: Last month, Bec (far right) attended a Conservative dinner (with Gina Rinehart’s PR critic James Radford and Sky News commentator Rita Panahi).
He continued: ‘We have a generational opportunity to bring together the brightest minds in science, medicine, industry and government to end the chronic disease epidemic.
“I look forward to working with the more than 80,000 HHS employees to free the agencies from the suffocating cloud of corporate capture so they can carry out their mission of making Americans once again the healthiest people on Earth.”
It comes after the Melbourne businesswoman attracted attention when she was seen breaking bread with a circle of powerful Australian conservatives last month.
Sky News commentator Rita Panahi shared a series of photos featuring Bec and National Liberal Party senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price.
They were joined in happy snaps by PR guru James Radford, former PR critic for Western Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart, and Melbourne richbag Kathy Garnaut.
“Thank you for being my dinner companions,” Judd said in an Instagram post.
The famous faces were among 375 people who gathered for a function organized by right-wing pressure group the Institute of Public Affairs, which campaigns for conservative economic and political principles.
Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott and former Donald Trump aide Mick Mulvaney also attended.
Kennedy (pictured) is a self-proclaimed scientific skeptic and has created controversy for his views, including linking pharmaceutical therapies to disorders such as autism.
Bec posted a message from Kennedy to President-elect Donald Trump on her own Instagram Stories and added her own caption.
Bec has become increasingly outspoken on political matters since the Covid pandemic, when she was highly critical of Melbourne’s long lockdown and criticized then-Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews as “Dictator Dan”.
He publicly clashed with Andrews over the crime rate near his home suburb in the Bayside area of the city in May 2022, claiming the state government “didn’t seem to care”.
“I’m so sick of gang rapes, assaults and home invasions in Bayside,” she fumed. “We feel insecure.”
Mr Andrews rejected Judd’s attack and said he was “not interested in having an argument” with her.
He then did just that, claiming that independent crime statistics refuted his “radical assessments of crime patterns.”
Bec has continued to speak out on crime and justice issues this year, describing Melbourne as “woke, broke and violent”.
She has worked in the fashion business and as a model and television presenter. She has four children with her husband, former West Coast Eagles and Carlton captain Chris Judd.
Daily Mail Australia sought comment from Judd and the API.