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The Trump administration has attacked science 574 times. Track each instance with this online tool
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The Trump administration has attacked science 574 times. Track each instance with this online tool

Fast Company · Jun 24, 2026, 6:15 PM · Also reported by 4 other sources

Donald Trump’s attacks on science began on the very first day of his second presidential term. On January 20, 2025, he withdrew the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement, declared a national emergency to justify the expansion of fossil fuels, and repealed multiple environmental protections. That was just the start. Since Trump returned to office, his administration has carried out some 574 attacks on science, according to a new tracker from the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). There has been constant coverage of these attacks, like how the administration announced plans to scrap PFAS ‘forever chemical’ regulations and stop requiring polluters to report their emissions. [Screenshot: Union of Concerned Scientists] When the Trump administration fired Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Susan Monarez, in another example, her lawyers said she was targeted for standing up for science. But the scope of these actions can be hard to wrap our heads around. That’s why UCS put them all in one place. “The consequences of these attacks impact real people—limiting access to information and services related to life-or-death issues such as severe weather, contagious diseases and food safety,” Jules Barbati-Dajches, analyst for the Center for Science and Democracy at UCS, said in a statement. With the Attacks of Science Tracker, you can see a full list of attacks and sort by categories—from climate science, energy, and the environment to health and safety and even elections. Of the administration’s actions, nearly 200 have targeted climate science, another 224 have attacked the environment, and 343 have impacted public health and safety. You can also sort by type of attack—like censorship, the placements of political appointees with a history of promoting misinformation or “anti-science” views, the termination or sidelining of federal scientists, the politicization of research funding, and more—as well as by federal agency. The track

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