Consider This from NPR - Science funding was hit in 2025. What does that mean for the future?

Episode Date: December 23, 2025

2025 was a hard year for science. The Trump administration upended federal funding for all kinds of scientific pursuits, slashing budgets across agencies like NASA, NIH and NOAA. NPR's Rob Stein and... Katia Riddle spoke to scientists and officials who worry that those cuts could cause the United States to lose its competitive edge as a global hub for research and innovation, and steer future generations away from careers in science. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Michael Levitt, with audio engineering by Zo vanGinhoven. It was edited by Sarah Handel, Scott Hensley and Amina Khan. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, it's Juana Summers. Before the show today, let's talk a little more about public media and what makes NPR unique. The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 said that local public media stations should be responsive to their communities. To this day, they are. NPR member stations are reporting from town council meetings and state houses in many towns and regions where local newspapers have stopped publishing. And as digital paywalls rise elsewhere, we provide news and information to everyone. for free, regardless of their ability to pay. This is a commitment that will never change in NPR, but with federal funding for public media eliminated, we now rely on your support to bring you consider this more than ever. That's why we're so grateful to NPR Plus supporters and other listeners who have already stepped up to donate, listeners like Evelyn and Hawaii, who says, Public Radio is the nation's voice, and at the same time, the voice of each town, city, and state. Evelyn, thank you so much. We are so proud that the NPR network reaches more than 99% of the
Starting point is 00:01:06 population. That's pretty cool. You can help keep this free public service available to everyone today by signing up for NPR Plus. It's a simple recurring donation that gets you perks to NPR's podcasts. Join us at plus.npr.org. All right, let's get into today's show. Fran Baganol is worried. We are bleeding young scientists like crazy. Baganol is an astrophysicist at the University of Colorado. She works on the Juno mission studying Jupiter, and this year has been tough. Funding for fields like hers has been facing a lot of uncertainty,
Starting point is 00:01:49 and she says that's driving young scientists away. They're saying, I can go to Europe because ESA is funding research projects, or I can go to Australia because they're running or I can go to China or Japan, India. They're all working and expanding their science research. Baganal says that not only will the United States lose its competitive edge, she also worries about the impact, the loss of opportunity in areas like space exploration will have on younger generations.
Starting point is 00:02:25 What really excites kids is to hear about space. research. You know, that's cool and neat, right? You know, if you say to someone, you could operate a robot on Mars or something like that, they'll get excited and do their math homework. I know it may not seem like a direct connection, but it is in fact huge that space exploration inspires and motivates people to do their math homework and do their physics and move into technical areas. Consider this. The United States has long been the preeminent place for scientific research. But with federal funding uncertain at best, what are the real costs of cuts? From NPR, I'm Juana Summers.
Starting point is 00:03:21 It's consider this from NPR. If we're taking stock of winners and losers in 20s, 2025, science is on the list of losers. The Trump administration upended federal funding for all kinds of scientific pursuits. NPR Health and Science Correspondents Rob Stein and Katie Riddle have come to talk about the implications of these cuts. Hi to both of you. Hey, Wana. Hi, Wana. Hey there. So let's start if we can with just a little history of science in America. My understanding is that World War II was a turning point in this country's investment in science. Katie, tell us a little bit more about that. Yeah, that's right. You know, at the turn of the 20th century, there wasn't necessarily a marriage between science and government. That changed around the time, like you said, of World War II. As part of the war effort, the U.S. plowed money into scientific research. And it led to advancements like penicillin becoming widely available and the development of the first nuclear weapons. I talked to this historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Patrick McCray, who gives a lot of the credit for our existing system. to one man, Vaniever Bush. He wrote a report calling on the U.S. to increase significantly investments, and that is what we did. Health economy and national security. Those are the three main things that science provided for us after 1945, and those not surprisingly were the three main things that Bush argued for in his
Starting point is 00:04:45 report that science would provide. Today, the U.S. is the biggest investor in research and development in the world. This investment has led to tremendous breakthroughs, like the Foundation of the Internet and Genetic Medicine. Rob, with everything we've seen this year, is there a sense that the country's commitment to sciences and doubt? Yeah, many people who Kedia and I talked to for this reporting expressed grave concerns that this grand American scientific experiment is suffering irreparable damage.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Here's Bruce Alberts from the University of California, San Francisco. He ran the National Academy of Sciences for more than a decade. It's very tragic and very distressing for everybody. who cares about U.S. prosperity and U.S. leadership in the world. It's just, you know, shooting ourselves in the foot. Let's now dig into some of the details. Rob, you have been covering the National Institutes of Health, which is, of course, the largest public funder of biomedical science in the world.
Starting point is 00:05:40 Bring us up to speed, if you can, about what's been happening there. It's been a tumultuous, traumatic year, not just for the scientists at the NIH itself, but also for many of the thousands of scientists around the world whose work lives and dies on NIH funding. The NIH staff of about 20,000 was cut by thousands, many of those left behind are frightened, angry, and demoralized, and billions of dollars in grants to study everything from, you know, vaccines and infectious diseases to diabetes and cancer have been terminated or thrown into chaos. How are staffers coping with all of this? It's been rough. Sylvia Joe manages grants at the National Cancer Institute.
Starting point is 00:06:19 She told me about getting anonymous internal emails terminating research. just because it might mention something that sounds like diversity, equity, and inclusion. You know, DEI. She's not speaking on behalf of the agency. What we call drone attacks coming from above. You know, no names, no email addresses. There's no human, accountable human being that we know of. So to have this just like attack from above, it's just crazy.
Starting point is 00:06:46 And it's just absolutely soul-crushing. So that's why I eventually made the decision to leave. I just, you know, can't take it anymore. She's leaving the NIH next month after 18 years. I have to say it's really striking to hear her describe this as soul-crushing. Is that something that you're hearing from other people as well? Oh, absolutely. I asked Dr. Francis Collins about this.
Starting point is 00:07:10 He ran the NIH for a dozen years through Democratic and Republican administrations. What was done this year was basically move fast and break things without a whole lot of interest in what the consequences might be. I just find it heartbreaking. And that's a pretty widely held view. Katie, you've covered other federal agencies this year. Where else has science been disrupted under this administration? The chaos and tumult that Rob is describing, that has been widespread across nearly every federal agency that is engaged in science.
Starting point is 00:07:43 The National Science Foundation, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, or NASA, even the Department of Veterans Affairs has seen studies disrupt. and major research projects put into limbo with staffing freezes and ongoing funding uncertainty. At NSF alone, there were more than 1,500 grants canceled, many of them projects related to DEI. That represents more than $1 billion in funding. So, Ralph, what do Trump administration officials have to say about all of this? They say the nation's scientific institutions, including medical and public health agencies like the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and yes, even the NIH. desperately need shaking up.
Starting point is 00:08:25 I talked about this with Dr. J. Badacharya. He's the NIH director. He told me he knows morale suffered, but argues he's turned that around and is reinvigorating the NIH. Some changes have happened at the NIH, which I think were long overdue. Changes to change the culture of the NIH
Starting point is 00:08:42 to fund more innovative science, be less risk-averse in the portfolio of scientific projects we fund. Because life expectancy in this country has been flat-lined since 2010. The research ideas that we've had, I mean, there are a lot of amazing innovations, but they have not translated over to better health for Americans. And he chafes at suggestions that the White House or Health and Human Services Secretary Robert of Kennedy Jr. have politicized the NIH. Secretary of Kennedy has not asked me to put my thumb on the scales of any scientific projects to say, you must have the scientific project come out this way or that way.
Starting point is 00:09:15 I think that would be a red line. I have not seen that from Secretary Kennedy or the president. Dr. Pratatataria argues the U.S. remains a biomedical beacon for the rest of the world. I think the future is bright. I mean, there's still no better place on Earth to do biomedical science. If you're a young scientist in this country, this is still by far the very best place on Earth to do science. So that's the view from the top at NIH, but I wonder, what are you hearing from young scientists? Do they agree that this is still the best place to be? A lot of the scientists I talk to do not. I spoke with one young scientist named Brandon. Coventry, and he's not sure. He is a recipient of grant funding from NIH, some of it,
Starting point is 00:09:54 which was recently revoked. He grew up here in a small town in Illinois. He's now at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He researches treatments that could help people with diseases like Parkinson's and epilepsy. Coventry is at a pivotal place in his career. He's looking to start his own lab, take a tenure track position somewhere, and really put down roots. He says after watching what's happened this year, he does not trust that the United States is going to be a sustainable place to do this. And we've lost that sort of pipeline and certainty of the pipeline that's really been a staple irregardless of what administration has been in office. Like, this is the first time where that's just been out of whack. So, Katie,
Starting point is 00:10:37 what's he doing? Yeah, he's considering leaving the country, possibly for Canada or somewhere else. He says this desire to leave is something that he hears. from many of his peers as well. I think for many of us, this is a calling to make the world a better place, and we would love to do that in our homes, but we're going to go to places where we can do that. Coventry says even if the money, Spickett, is turned back on in a future administration, it's going to take more than that to rebuild his faith in the system. And, you know, one of the bigger question is whether the trust in this grand bargain
Starting point is 00:11:12 that made America the greatest scientific powerhouse has been fractured beyond repair. NPR Health and Science Correspondence, Rob Stein and Katie Riddle, thanks to both of you. You bet. Thanks, Wana. This episode was produced by Michael Leavitt with audio engineering by Zoe Van Goghenhoeven. It was edited by
Starting point is 00:11:30 Sarah Handel, Scott Hensley, and Omina Kahn. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Wana Summers.

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