CDC Collapse Deepens as RFK Jr. Faces Congress and Trump Reclaims Vaccines
How the GOP’s health war pits Trump’s vaccine legacy against Kennedy’s crusade and leaves the CDC in shambles
The CDC is unraveling faster than at any moment in recent memory. Since late August, the agency has lost its newly appointed director, four senior public health officials, and dozens of career staff in what insiders have called a collapse of scientific integrity. On August 27, CDC Director Susan Monarez was fired less than a month after taking office. Her departure followed her refusal to endorse policy directives reportedly pushed by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., including internal purges and changes to vaccine guidance.
In the days that followed, Dr. Debra Houry, Dr. Daniel Jernigan, Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, and Jennifer Layden—all senior officials—resigned. By September 1, staff at CDC headquarters in Atlanta staged a walkout in protest. A video of the “clap out,” where employees lined the sidewalk to bid farewell to the outgoing scientists, spread quickly on social media and cable news. The agency, once a pillar of pandemic response and immunization campaigns, is now leaderless and demoralized.
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Offit Sidelined
On September 2, Dr. Paul Offit confirmed that his term on the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee would not be renewed. Offit had submitted paperwork to extend his appointment through 2027, but was notified by email that his service had ended. No formal explanation was provided. Offit told The Washington Post, “They thanked me for my service. That was it.” He added, “I have no doubt this came from HHS. I’ve been openly critical of Secretary Kennedy’s rhetoric. I guess that was enough.”
Offit, known for co-developing the rotavirus vaccine and for his decades-long rebuttals of vaccine misinformation, joins a growing list of scientists and public health professionals who are being removed or resigning under RFK Jr.’s leadership.
We’ve reported on the ongoing collapse of the CDC:
Kennedy Faces Congress
The breaking point came on September 4, when Kennedy appeared before the Senate Finance Committee. The hearing, initially expected to center on HHS budget matters, turned into a bipartisan inquisition over his handling of the CDC and vaccine policy. Senator Raphael Warnock accused Kennedy of “reckless disregard for science and the truth.” Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican and physician, accused him of “denying Americans access to life-saving vaccines.”
Kennedy denied that he had pressured the FDA to block mRNA research or ordered the firing of any specific individuals. “I want robust science,” he told the committee. “But I also want transparency and accountability. This isn't about censorship; it’s about integrity.” His answers were met with open frustration by Democrats and unease from several Republicans. Even Kennedy’s own relatives spoke out. His nephew Joe Kennedy III posted on X (formerly Twitter), “None of us will be spared the consequences of this chaos. It’s time for a resignation.”
Trump’s Vaccine Pivot
At the same moment Kennedy was struggling to defend his record, Donald Trump was making headlines of his own. On September 5, in Oval Office remarks, Trump praised vaccines as “amazing” and said, “You have vaccines that work. They just pure and simple work.” He cited polio and COVID-19 as examples and reiterated his pride in the federal government’s role in developing them during his first term.
Trump also weighed in on Florida’s decision to eliminate vaccine mandates, a policy led by Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo. While he did not endorse the decision outright, Trump described it as a “tough stance” and declined to directly criticize it. That phrasing seemed designed to straddle the political line—crediting vaccines while defending the state’s right to opt out of mandates. It’s a familiar dance for Trump, who once distanced himself from COVID-19 booster campaigns but now wants full credit for launching Operation Warp Speed.
The Nobel Peace Prize Fantasy
For Trump, the vaccine pivot is about more than public health. It’s about legacy. In recent weeks, voices in pharma and media have revived a suggestion that Trump deserves a Nobel Peace Prize for the development and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. On September 3, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said publicly that Operation Warp Speed “saved millions of lives” and was “Nobel Peace Prize worthy.” Even RFK Jr., who has built a political identity on vaccine skepticism, echoed that sentiment in his testimony before the Senate. “President Trump deserves credit for that achievement,” Kennedy admitted, before pivoting back to criticizing the rollout.
The irony here is so stark it barely needs explanation. Trump wants a prize for the science that Kennedy is actively unraveling. Kennedy, in turn, wants to defund the very research that delivered the breakthrough. And the agency caught in the middle—the CDC—is bleeding out.
A Party at War with Its Own Legacy
As of September 6, RFK Jr. remains in his post. Trump continues to walk a rhetorical tightrope, boosting his vaccine record while tolerating policies that gut immunization access. The Republican Party, for its part, now finds itself split between celebrating medical science and discrediting it. The CDC isn’t just another casualty in that war. It’s ground zero.
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Sources:
"CDC chief fired after weeks in role, challenges ouster as four top officials resign" — Reuters, August 27, 2025
"Fired CDC director clashed with Kennedy on vaccine policy" — Reuters, August 29, 2025
"Ousted CDC head says she was pressured to preapprove vaccine panel recommendations" — Reuters, September 4, 2025
"RFK Jr critic Paul Offit removed from FDA vaccine advisory committee" — The Guardian, September 2, 2025
"Prominent critic of RFK Jr. blocked from FDA vaccine advisory panel" — Washington Post, September 2, 2025
"US Senate panel questions Kennedy on CDC departures and vaccine policy" — Reuters, September 4, 2025
"Trump calls Florida's vaccine plan a 'tough stance'; says vaccines that work should be used" — Reuters, September 5, 2025
"Pfizer, Moderna defend COVID vaccine effectiveness after Trump remarks" — Reuters, September 3, 2025
"Pfizer responds to success of Operation Warp Speed and reaffirms transparency of COVID vaccine data" — Pfizer Press Release, September 3, 2025








Democrat: One for all and all for one.
Republican: Survival of the fittest (by whatever means necessary).
After a conversation with a neighbor the other day, I have a bit of a different opinion. Democrats—One for all, love thy neighbor as thyself, Republicans—tight-fisted, care more for their donors but still not evil. MAGA- care only for their donors, claim to be Christian but don’t practice it, survival of the fittest by any means necessary, unable to disagree with their grandmother and kids without denying their humanity