News
Analysis
Trump
Targets Agencies Long Seen as Above Politics. Critics See Big Risks.
Trump
officials say the president is within his rights to fire officials who do not
share his agenda.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/28/us/politics/trump-firings-cdc-fed.html
Aug. 28,
2025
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has long been the place Americans
turned to for data-driven information to help make health decisions.
The
Bureau of Labor Statistics was the source of nonpartisan jobs numbers by which
Americans could judge the status of the economy.
And the
Federal Reserve was the independent central bank that often bucked the
short-term demands of presidents with an eye toward the country’s long-term
economic health.
Now the
independence of each of these American institutions is in question after
President Trump, in a push to root out pockets of independence of government,
has fired or taken steps to fire their leaders.
In doing
so, critics say, the Trump administration is risking the credibility of
agencies that were long respected as above politics and play a vital role in
providing information needed to guide major decisions about the nation’s
course.
These
places “are not supposed to be partisan,” said Chris Edelson, an assistant
professor of government at American University. “The biggest danger is the
institution loses credibility, and people can’t count on it.”
In the
span of a few weeks, Mr. Trump has fired the head of the Bureau of Labor
Statistics after a less-than-flattering jobs report; has sought to remove a
Federal Reserve Board governor amid a push to gain control of the board; and
has backed his health secretary’s decision to dismiss the director of the
C.D.C. over vaccine policy.
Lawyers
for Susan Monarez, the C.D.C. director, said she was targeted after she refused
to “rubber-stamp unscientific, reckless directives.”
The White
House’s efforts represented an intrusion of political warfare into the
leadership of federal financial and health policy, which traditionally had been
insulated from such interference.
William
A. Galston, a senior fellow and the chair of governance studies at the
Brookings Institution, said the purge at the C.D.C. “replaces scientific and
medical expertise with ideas about health and disease that have only a bare
overlap with the truth.”
Should
the credibility of the Federal Reserve be compromised, he said, it could even
threaten “the stability of the world economy.”
Mr.
Galston, who was a policy adviser to President Bill Clinton, said he has
watched Mr. Trump push the role of the president far beyond what his
predecessors would have ever tried.
“This is
the most comprehensive effort that we’ve ever seen from a president to
centralize executive power in the hands of the president, to reduce or
eliminate islands of independence, to be served by people who are chosen not to
oppose his will, and to reduce the power of competing branches of government,”
Mr. Galston said. “It’s the centralization of constitutional power in the
executive.”
Trump
officials say the president is well within his rights to fire officials who do
not share his agenda.
“For
years, Republican candidates have campaigned on reining in the power of
unelected bureaucrats, but President Trump actually delivered on this
decades-long pledge to check runaway government power and spending,” said
Taylor Rogers, a White House spokeswoman.
During
his first term, Mr. Trump cited the Constitution’s Article II, which, he said,
gave him “the right to do whatever I want as president.”
In his
second term, he is trying to make that maximalist vision of the presidency a
reality.
Embracing
the so-called unitary executive theory, Mr. Trump has signed an executive order
that requires independent agencies such as the Federal Communications
Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission to route their
regulations and budgetary actions through the White House for review.
He has
reshaped the Justice Department, once a seat of independent power, appointing
loyalists and his personal lawyers to top positions.
He has
reinstated “Schedule F” policy in an attempt to weaken the independence of
career civil servants, making them easier to fire.
He has
fired or demoted more than 20 inspectors general or acting inspectors general
since he took office, stripping pockets of independent accountability from
government.
The
administration has suspended around 30 employees of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency after they wrote to Congress warning that the Trump
administration had gutted the nation’s ability to handle hurricanes, floods and
other extreme weather disasters.
“Everyone
sees this, and people who want to keep their job understand they cannot speak
up,” Mr. Edelson said.
Conservatives
argue that government workers — many of whom Mr. Trump derides as members of
the “deep state” looking to undermine his agenda — had accumulated too much
power in recent years, making decisions about the Covid-19 pandemic that were
unpopular among those on the right and viewed by them as highly political.
“You tend
to hear those who think that agencies should have insulation from the president
describe administrative officials as exercising independence or being
apolitical,” said J. Joel Alicea, law professor at Catholic University and the
director of the Center for the Constitution and the Catholic Intellectual
Tradition.
He said
there was a flip side to that argument: “By making executive officials
removable at will by the president,” he said, “the Constitution ensures
political accountability for them to the American people.”
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.
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