“Health Policy Watch”, which describes itself as independent, is endeavouring to push the members of the new European health initiative “Make Europe Healthy Again” into the far-right conspiratorial corner.
Source: Transition News, WS, 24 October 2025
On 15 October 2025 , the new health movement “Make Europe Healthy Again” (MEHA) was launched in Brussels (we reported). The event was organised by Austrian MEP Gerald Hauser and doctor Maria Hubmer-Mogg. What some see as a ray of hope is discredited by others as an initiative “by anti-vaccination campaigners, far-right politicians and representatives of alternative medicine”.
For example, the WHO-affiliated portal Health Policy Watch, which purports to provide independent reporting on health issues, provided information about the MEHA initiative and endeavoured to portray the movement and its members as far-right conspiracy theorists – just as the mainstream media did with critics of the measures during the staged “coronavirus pandemic”.
Attempts were also made to portray the European initiative as being under the thumb of controversial US representatives of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, which was launched by Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. In this context, Health Policy Watch pointed outthat MAHA representatives were “prominently represented” at the European event.
The event was hosted by the Patriots for Europe Foundation, “a right-wing alliance led by the Hungarian government”, the portal reported. MEHA’s mission is to “promote a Europe in which people regain their power, their voice, their health and their traditions”. The mission statement continues:
“By protecting the foundations of life – clean food, water, air, soil, space and safe communities – we help nations build supportive systems, break the cycles of chronic disease, promote vitality and respect culture, sovereignty, peace and human dignity.”
The founder and president of MEHA, Dr Maria Hubmer-Mogg, is “an Austrian anti-vaccination activist and far-right politician”, writes Health Policy Watch. She rejects the EU’s sanctions against Russia and calls for stricter immigration policies. At the same time, she claims that many people are suffering from “post-vaccine syndrome” since COVID-19, and she rejects the World Health Organisation (WHO).
The Vice President of MEHA is the Dutch politician Rob Roos, who was Deputy Chairman of the European Conservatives and Reformists Group (ECR) in the European Parliament until mid-2024. MEHA cites the Global Wellness Forum (GWF) as a “partner”, whose co-founder Sayer Ji is a member of the MEHA steering committee.
Ji fought against compulsory vaccination during the pandemic together with other GWF leaders, including osteopath Sherri Tenpenny, the portal continues. Tenpenny is considered one of the most active sources of anti-vaccination information on social media. Her medical licence was revoked after she claimed that the COVID-19 vaccine “magnetises” people.
However, Health Policy Watch does not mention that a peer-reviewed study on this controversial topic was just published in June 2025 , which confirmed this magnetism in the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine (we reported).
MEHA’s 17-member steering committee is dominated by European vaccination opponents, including cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra. However, seven members of the committee are US-Americans, including Dr Robert Malone, head of MAHA. Kennedy appointed him to the Advisory Committee on Immunisation Practices (ACIP) of the US CDC, which was a controversial decision, according to Health Policy Watch.
Malone has “repeatedly spread false and alarmist claims about COVID-19 vaccines andadvocated the use of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin against SARS-CoV-2, even though numerous studies have shown that these agents are ineffective”. Recently, Malone even claimed that eight-year-old Daisy Hildebrand, who died of measles in Texas, actually died of septicaemia. On top of that, he blamed a medical facility for the “mistreatment”.
Other US members of the committee include Mary Holland, executive director of Children’s Health Defense (the anti-vaccination organisation founded by Kennedy), Tony Lyons, co-chair of the MAHA Political Action Committee (PAC), Reggie Littlejohn, an anti-abortion and “anti-globalism” activist, and Tom Harrington of the right-wing Brownstone Institute, which has formed an important bridge between conservative Trump supporters and libertarian anti-vaccination activists during the pandemic. Australian local politician Adrian McRae, an opponent of COVID injections with “pro-Russian views”, also sits on MEHA’s advisory board.
Health Police Watch also shows a lack of understanding towards MEHA’s criticism of the WHO and Big Pharma. Speakers at the event emphasised the need to break the influence of the pharmaceutical industry on the healthcare system and railed against “the totalitarianism of unelected globalist institutions such as the WHO and the European Commission”.
Mr Hubmer-Mogg had called for the European Medicines Agency (EMA) to be funded by the EU in future and not by pharmaceutical companies. This is because more than 90 per cent of the EMA’s budget currently comes from fees paid by companies for the assessment of marketing authorisation applications, safety monitoring and scientific advice.
However, MEHA does not want pharmaceutical companies to conduct clinical trials – even though these companies develop the drugs and earn money from them, criticises Health Policy Watch and quotes Hubmer-Mogg with these words:
“No more conflict of interest, no more concealment of side effects, no more studies financed by the pharmaceutical industry.”
Malhotra took up this topic in his one-hour keynote speech and declared that “evidence-based medicine has become an illusion. It has been hijacked by powerful commercial interests, creating a pandemic of misinformed doctors and – unintentionally – harmed patients”.
The Belgian psychologist Mattias Desmet, also a member of the steering committee, is also mentioned by Health Policy Watch. He said that the WHO’s One Health policy was proof that a “globalist institution” was trying to impose its standardised view of health on people.
But in reality, the WHO’s One Health concept is just a term for the fact that “the health of humans, animals and ecosystems is closely linked and must be considered together – especially to prevent zoonoses and growing antibiotic resistance”, Health Policy Watch justifies these totalitarian WHO endeavours.
At the same time, the portal is also trying to discredit Desmet for statements he made during the coronavirus pandemic. For example, he claimed that the official government measures against COVID-19 were “a form of collective madness”, which he described as “mass education”.
Conclusion: The attempt by the Health Policy Watch portal to cast the MEHA movement in a bad light reads like a confirmation for all those who have been able to look behind the scenes since the pandemic that the new initiative is supported by people with common sense, ethics and insight – and must be seen as a glimmer of hope.
Source:
Transition News: “Make Europe Healthy Again” – new movement wants to change EU health policy – 18 October 2025
Health Policy Watch: ‘Make Europe Healthy Again’ Launch is Dominated by Anti-Vaxxers and Far Right Politicians – 22 October 2025
Transition News: Pfizer/BioNTech “vaccine” triggers magnetism – 14 June 2025





