A son of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is rolling out a $100 million investment fund that explicitly leans on his father's Make America Healthy Again agenda. Finn Kennedy's Victura Ventures—named after John F. Kennedy's sailboat—aims to back early-stage companies in health care AI, consumer health, and related technologies, according to an offering document reviewed by the Financial Times. The fund, which already has about $70 million in commitments, pitches itself as poised to benefit from a "rare convergence" in health care and from policy shifts and initiatives tied to RFK Jr.'s MAHA movement.
The effort fits into a broader pattern of Trump administration allies and relatives pursuing business lines aligned with government priorities, including cryptocurrency ventures and companies that later won federal contracts. In a statement, Finn Kennedy said the fund was shaped by his own chronic pain and a desire to back founders "building better healthcare." He previously worked at Austin-based venture firm 8VC, and his direct health-sector experience is unclear. Finn Kennedy also is a board member of MAHA Holdings, which has released little information about itself. The Health and Human Services Department said Kennedy complies with all ethics and confidentiality requirements and regularly consults department lawyers.
Legal experts quoted by the Financial Times said the structure does not appear to breach conflict-of-interest rules unless RFK Jr. shares nonpublic information. Victura's materials cite opportunities arising from government health policy and MAHA events, including a 2025 Washington conference featuring RFK Jr. and Vice President JD Vance. The schedule included meetings between MAHA influencers and industry leaders from Regeneron, CRISPR Therapeutics, Walmart, Google, and Neuralink, per the Hill.
- MedPage Today has a look at how organizations work together to advance the MAHA agenda here.