CDC
officials who quit in protest lead call to ‘get politics out of public health’
Staffers
gather in Atlanta to applaud senior leaders who resigned after CDC chief Susan
Monarez was fired
George
Chidi in Atlanta and Guardian staff
Thu 28
Aug 2025 22.45 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/28/cdc-rally-staffers-protest
Senior
CDC vaccine research and public health leaders who resigned in protest told
hundreds of supporters across the street from the campus on Thursday that the
Trump administration needs to “get politics out of public health”.
The
agency is reeling from the firing of the CDC chief, Susan Monarez, but Monarez,
who was confirmed as CDC chief just a month ago, has refused to be removed.
Three senior leaders – Debra Houry, Demetre Daskalakis and Daniel Jernigan –
resigned shortly after in protest, citing the alleged spread of misinformation
under the Trump administration and political interference in their work. The
staffers cheered and applauded them at the event on Thursday.
“You are
the people that protect America, and America needs to see that you are the
people that protect America, and we are going to be your loudest advocates,”
said Daskalakis to the throng. Daskalakis, who was accompanied at the rally by
Houry and Jernigan, is now the former director of the National Center for
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases and is known for his leadership in HIV
prevention and vaccination programs and the Biden administration’s response to
the mpox outbreak.
The
three, plus Jennifer Leyden, who led the office of public health data, resigned
together on Thursday to make a statement about the damage the administration
had done to public vaccine research, and in protest of the administration’s
response to vaccine disinformation, they said.
“We
agreed to do this together. We’ve been talking about it for months, and the
past few days, it was just escalating,” said Houry, the CDC’s former chief
medical officer. “If one of us retired, it would have been a blip. When the
three of us do it together, it’s more powerful and just shows the state of our
agency.” She and the others are asking for Congress to intervene, to put a stop
to political interference in the organization’s work.
The
agency is overseen by the US health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, who in
recent days restricted the use of Covid vaccines for Americans and has removed
scientific advisers and cut funding for medical research. Kennedy has
reportedly tapped the deputy health secretary, Jim O’Neill, an investor in
libertarian billionaire Peter Thiel’s orbit, as the CDC’s interim leader.
Monarez was the first CDC director in 50 years to not hold a medical degree.
O’Neill would be the second.
The staff
and supporters of the CDC gathered across the street from the campus in
Atlanta, and Houry, Daskalakis and Jernigan were met with applause and
handshakes, a marked difference from this morning when they were escorted off
campus.
“They are
essentially trying to undo a lot of the science that has been settled for
vaccine policies,” Jernigan said. The dismissal “was a tipping point for us
that we had to say we’ve got to do something. We need to get the politics out
of public health. We need to make sure that we’re using objective science in
the making of vaccine and other treatment decisions. Until we can do that and
get back to that, ideology will be just driving the policies rather than the
science driving the policies.”
The
turmoil at the CDC comes as the agency is still recovering from the attack of a
gunman who fired more than 500 rounds into the Atlanta offices before killing
the DeKalb county police officer David Rose. More than two weeks later, the
White House had said nothing about the shooting, Houry said. Staffers were
“concerned about speaking about vaccines in our science because they’re worried
they’ll be targeted”, she said. “That’s unacceptable … This was an act of
domestic terrorism. They need to address this.”
The
shooting has done more than shake up the staff. The community is questioning
whether their lives are valued by the federal government, said Dr Jasmine
Clark, an Emory University professor of microbiology and state representative
in the suburbs north of Atlanta, who is running for Congress. The speed with
which the event was organized – not a walkout, more like a long lunch – spoke
to the sentiment in the building, she said:
“So many
people in my community said they feel like no one values their life, and what
am I doing when I go to work every day? It’s a privilege that people have no
idea what happens in that building, and the fact that they don’t know means
they’re doing a good job. But unfortunately we have an administration that does
not value that work and in fact actively devalues the work and spreads
misinformation that cost the life of Officer David Rose.”
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