Trump's Trials - Federal judge halts RFK Jr.'s changes to children's vaccine policies
Episode Date: March 17, 2026A federal judge has issued a preliminary ruling that puts a hold on the Trump administration's overhaul of vaccine policies, including cuts to the number of recommended vaccines for children.Support N...PR and hear every episode of Trump's Terms sponsor-free with NPR+. Sign up at plus.npr.org.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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It's Trump's terms from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.
Every episode, we bring you a story from NPR's recent coverage of the 47th president
with a focus on ways he's using power like no president before him.
Here is the latest from NPR.
I'm Michelle Martin.
A federal judge has blocked a series of controversial changes that Trump administration has made to government vaccine policies.
NPR health correspondent Rob Stein has been covering those vaccine policies
and this ruling, and he's with us now to tell us more. Good morning, Rob.
Good morning. Okay, so would you just, first of all, remind us of the changes the administration wanted to make that might now be undone?
Yeah, the administration has been on quite a role on vaccines since President Trump returned to office and named Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime vaccine critic as his health secretary.
Kennedy's made it harder for people to get access to the COVID-19 vaccines, dropped a longstanding recommendation that all babies routinely get vaccinated against.
hepatitis B at birth, and perhaps most controversially slash the number of vaccines that the federal
government recommends children routinely receive. But that's all now in limbo because district court
judge Brian Murphy and Boston ruled that the changes Kennedy's been making violated federal
law about how this sort of thing should be done. And so these changes are all moot, at least for now.
What did the judge say Kennedy did wrong? Well, first of all, the judge took issue with one of the first
things Kennedy did, and that was sacking and then replacing the entire membership of an influential
CDC committee. It's known as the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. That committee
plays a key role in setting federal vaccine policy, including, you know, who should get what
shots when and which shots are required to be covered by insurance. The judge ruled that Kennedy
failed to follow the federal law that governs this sort of thing when he handpicked the slate of
new members who shared his views about vaccines. That committee was supposed to meet this week,
but now that's been postponed. And the judge also took issue with the process that this
newly reconstituted committee has been using to come up with new recommendations.
Judge Murphy says the committee failed to follow a long-standing process for making these
very complex decisions based on the best available science. So in a pretty scathing 45-page ruling,
the judge voided all the decisions that Kidmitties made, as well as what Kennedy did when he ripped up the childhood vaccine schedule without even going through the committee, which the judge said was, quote, arbitrary and capricious.
This whole vaccine issue, Rob, has created so much sort of turmoil and anxiety among parents. So what's been the reaction to all this?
Yeah, absolutely. Well, you know, the major medical groups that filed this lawsuit led by the American Academy of Pediatrics, they're just thrilled.
Here's Richard Hughes, the lawyer who led the case for the plaintiffs at a briefing for reporters.
This is just a great victory, not just for vaccines and public health in the United States, but for science.
And so we're just absolutely elated with it.
But, Michelle, as you might expect, the decision has been condemned by anti-vaccine activists.
I talked about this with Mary Holland.
She's the president of the children's health defense, a group that Kennedy helped start.
We should be caring about the babies and the young children,
And instead of the judge looking at what is actually happening to young children, he is looking at the financial harms to pediatricians.
That is not what the immunization schedule is about or should be about.
Rob, is this the last word in this case?
No, this is just a temporary stay pending further legal action.
And Andrew Nixon, a spokesman for the Health and Human Services Department, told me in an email that the government plans to appeal.
And you know, Michelle, this comes at a tricky moment.
The White House has been kind of.
muslin Kennedy on vaccines lately because of how unpopular his vaccine policies might affect
the Republicans in the midterm. So it's unclear how aggressive the administration is going to be
on vaccines going forward. That is NPR health correspondent, Rob Stein. Rob, thank you.
You bet.
Before we wrap up a reminder, you can find more coverage of the Trump administration on the NPR
politics podcast, where you can hear NPR's political reporters break down the day's
political news with new episodes every weekday afternoon.
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I'm Scott Detrow. Thanks for listening to Trump's terms from NPR.
