The White House fires the head of the main public health agency for not aligning herself ideologically.
Susan Monarez reportedly refused to adopt Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s stance on vaccination policy.
WashingtonThe White House announced Wednesday night that it had removed the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Susan Monarez, for not aligning with the president's agenda. In an email, a spokesman for Donald Trump, Kush Desai, said that Monarez "is not aligned with the president's agenda of Making America Healthy Again" and therefore, "the White House has removed Monarez from her position with the CDC," according to the report. The New York Times.
Monarez's lawyers had questioned the legality of the firing until President Donald Trump personally fires her. The president has yet to comment.
Because Monarez had been certified by the Senate, Kennedy could not fire her directly because her position falls under the authority of the president, not the health secretary. Even so, Kennedy had been pressured to try to force her to resign. According to Monarez's lawyer, the director had refused to resign of her own accord.
Monarez, an infectious disease researcher, was appointed to the position just a month ago. Monarez's lawyers have explained that the clash was precipitated by a direct clash between her and US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over his vaccine policy.
Four other top CDC officials have resigned en masse, frustrated by Kennedy's stance on vaccines: Debra Houry, chief medical officer; Demitir Daskalakis, head of vaccine recommendations; Daniel Jernigan, head of vaccine safety; and Jennifer Layden, chief of public health data. All of them denounced the "politicization" of the agency in separate internal messages and warned of the risks to the country's health security.
According to a statement from the US Department of Health, Monarez "is no longer director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention." The message, circulated on social media, did not include any explanation for the reasons for her dismissal. However, the director's lawyers responded with another statement denying that their client had resigned or received any official notice of termination. "When CDC Director Susan Monarez refused to approve reckless and unscientific instructions and to fire compromised health care experts, she chose to protect the public rather than serve a political agenda. For this, she has been targeted," they say.
The confrontation between Monarez and Kennedy had been brewing for days. According to sources close to the administration, New York TimesKennedy Jr. had already asked for his resignation this Monday and, when he refused, demanded that he remove part of the institution's leadership. It was then that Monarez sought support from several senators, which further strained their relationship.
The measure has been strongly criticized by industry insiders. Mandy Cohen, who headed the agency during the Biden administration, called the departure of Monarez and his colleagues an "irreparable loss." Also critical was Anne Schuchat, former deputy director of the CDC, who warned: "We are facing the departure of the best of the best. The nation's health security is at risk."
The crisis at the CDC erupts at a particularly delicate time for the agency: just a few weeks ago, a gunman opened fire on its headquarters in Atlanta, in an attack that was linked to conspiracy theories about vaccines and left a police officer dead and dozens of employees traumatized.