Trump administration cuts US science funding drastically in 2025

The second Trump administration has initiated sweeping reductions in federal science funding, affecting public health, climate research, and space exploration. Elon Musk, serving as a special adviser, led efforts through the Department of Government Efficiency to slash government spending. These moves mark a significant departure from decades of US investment in scientific progress.

Just one week after Donald Trump's inauguration in January 2025, he signed an executive order halting grants and loans from federal agencies. This action disrupted thousands of grants at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation (NSF), totaling approximately $3 billion, according to tracking by Grant Witness.

Elon Musk, as a special adviser, headed the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which targeted spending across agencies. Job cuts followed at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), NASA, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). In October, plans emerged for deep reductions at science centers within the US Geological Survey and National Park Service, impacting monitoring of agricultural resources, natural lands, and ecological research.

The administration also withdrew the US from the Paris Agreement and undermined climate efforts. Trump described climate change as "the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world" during a United Nations speech, dismissing renewable energy as a "scam." Key climate databases were axed, NOAA's monthly reporting calls were cancelled, and the National Climate Assessment was terminated. NOAA scientists avoided linking warming weather to climate change, drawing criticism from independent researchers.

Public health suffered major setbacks. In April, scientists overseeing the National Survey on Drug Use and Health were dismissed. Layoffs hit the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and reports on food insecurity ended. Recently, 100 positions at the National Center for Health Statistics were eliminated, including staff for the National Vital Statistics System and National Death Index.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., appointed to lead the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), oversaw over 10,000 layoffs. A vaccine skeptic, he promoted debunked links between vaccines and autism, and between Tylenol use in pregnancy and autism. In June, he directed the CDC to stop recommending COVID-19 vaccines for children and pregnant individuals.

In space policy, the proposed budget cuts NASA's science funding by 47%, cancelling missions like returning Mars samples from the Perseverance rover, the DAVINCI Venus probe, and detailed study of asteroid Apophis by OSIRIS-APEX. NASA leadership remains unstable, with Jared Isaacman repeatedly nominated as administrator, potentially favoring private sector outsourcing.

These changes reverse the post-World War II "endless frontier" approach to science as a driver of progress. While the 2026 budget awaits congressional approval, the disruptions have already prompted scientist departures and eroded US global leadership in research.

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Federal employees leaving a government building amid workforce cuts, with officials and charts illustrating reductions under the Trump administration's DOGE initiative.
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By year’s end, the civilian federal workforce is projected to fall from about 2.4 million to roughly 2.1 million employees, according to Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor. The cuts—championed by budget chief Russell Vought and the White House initiative dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, which Elon Musk led for the first four months—have targeted agencies overseeing health, the environment, education, and financial regulation while expanding immigration enforcement.

Congress has approved a budget that largely spares NASA's science programs from deep cuts proposed by the White House. The plan allocates $24.4 billion to the agency overall, with only a 1 percent reduction in science funding to $7.25 billion. This outcome follows months of uncertainty sparked by the Trump administration's initial proposals.

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The Department of Government Efficiency, the Elon Musk–fronted cost‑cutting initiative launched early in Donald Trump’s second term, has effectively lost its centralized structure less than a year after its creation. The Office of Personnel Management director has said the office “doesn’t exist” as a centralized entity, even as he insists DOGE’s principles continue to guide the administration’s push for deregulation and workforce cuts.

The Trump administration announced substantial layoffs of federal employees on October 10, 2025, as the government shutdown entered its tenth day. Court filings indicate around 4,200 workers across seven agencies are receiving reduction-in-force notices. The move has heightened tensions in Congress, with both parties blaming each other for the impasse over funding and health care subsidies.

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US President Donald Trump stated on Friday that he is directing government agencies to stop working with Anthropic. The Pentagon plans to declare the startup a supply-chain risk, marking a major blow following a showdown over technology guardrails. Agencies using the company's products will have a six-month phase-out period.

In 2025, widespread opposition challenged President Trump's policies through street protests, electoral victories, and court rulings. Approval ratings for Trump dropped sharply amid economic struggles and controversial deportations. Legal experts highlight over 150 federal court blocks on his executive actions, though the Supreme Court offered mixed support.

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About a year after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took office as U.S. secretary of health and human services, the CDC has rolled back several universal childhood immunization recommendations, and the administration has moved to claw back pandemic-era public health funds and unwind federal investments in mRNA vaccine development—steps that critics say conflict with Kennedy’s confirmation-hearing assurances on vaccines and vaccine-related funding.

 

 

 

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