The Morning: Health woes
Plus, air travel, voting rules and...cheating fruit?
The Morning
March 24, 2026

Good morning. The Senate confirmed Markwayne Mullin as homeland security secretary last night. An Iranian missile struck Tel Aviv. And the Pentagon said it would take a new approach to limiting access to journalists.

There’s more news below. Before we get to it, though, let’s pay a visit to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

An illustration showing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in profile and a syringe.
Photo Illustration by Mike McQuade

Health woes

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the leader of the Department of Health and Human Services, also oversees the C.D.C., the nation’s public health institute. He doesn’t like it much. He’s called it “the most corrupt agency at H.H.S. and maybe the government” and has vigorously defended mass firings that Elon Musk’s DOGE carried out there. At least 18 percent of the C.D.C. staff has been pushed out since January 2025.

Kennedy has said that the C.D.C. — which is made up of more than 20 centers focused on a wide range of public health issues, including infectious diseases, food-borne illness, substance abuse and violence prevention — is too big to be effective. He’s pointed to the agency’s difficulties during the coronavirus pandemic: “We literally did worse than any country in the world,” he said at a Senate hearing in September, “and the people at C.D.C. who oversaw that process, who put masks on our children, who closed our schools, are the people who will be leaving.”

My colleague Jeneen Interlandi interviewed more than 40 people who work or worked at the C.D.C. They described an agency in turmoil. Here’s some of what she learned.

Were statements trustworthy?

Early on, the Trump administration told agency staff that political appointees would review all public communications before they went out. In many cases, it left scientists unable to communicate with outside researchers or public health groups. Susan A. Wang, a former immunization adviser in the C.D.C., said:

We had a very stringent scientific process for vetting information that would get published on the C.D.C. website. Everything was checked and double-checked. And for political appointees to take over the means of communication is devastating, and also dangerous. Now, some things are correct and some are not, which means that you can’t trust any of it.

Dubious measles remedies

After a child in Texas died of the measles, the health secretary downplayed the outbreak as “not unusual” in cabinet meetings and television appearances, even though it was the largest since the disease was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000. Demetre C. Daskalakis, the former director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said:

Even as the outbreak grew, R.F.K. was still just praising the doctors who were giving snake-oil treatments like budesonide, a corticosteroid, and clarithromycin, an antibiotic, to kids with measles and saying how they saved hundreds of lives, which was absolute garbage. We were asked to add those treatments to the measles guidelines. We managed to mitigate that by including the words on the guidelines but saying that none of these were proven. Giving people the wrong medicines delayed lots of care for lots of kids.

Vaccine experts out, compatriots in

Kennedy has replaced members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, who set the C.D.C.’s vaccine recommendations. The newcomers have less expertise but share his views on vaccination. They’ve changed vaccine recommendations for flu, hepatitis B, measles, mumps, rubella and varicella. When Fiona Havers, a former medical epidemiologist in the respiratory viruses division, found out about the appointments, she recalled thinking:

I guess my career at C.D.C. is done. I didn’t want to be part of any machine that they were going to use to spread false information about vaccines or to take vaccines away.

This month, a federal judge temporarily halted Kennedy’s reconstitution of the A.C.I.P. and the changes he made to the childhood vaccine schedule. He said the health secretary’s changes were “arbitrary and capricious.”

A leaderless agency

C.D.C. employees told Jeneen that the agency has been largely leaderless since President Trump took office. Kennedy appointed Susan Monarez acting director last January. She was confirmed in July — and fired less than a month later. She testified before the Senate that Kennedy was leading public health to “a very dangerous place” and that the nation’s children would be harmed by his policies.

Read what it was like for the scientists who worked there when Trump recaptured the White House.

AIR TRAVEL

A badly damaged Air Canada plane.
At LaGuardia Airport yesterday. Dakota Santiago for The New York Times

LaGuardia collision

Airport delays continue

  • ICE agents began arriving at airports to help understaffed T.S.A. teams manage security, though the agents’ tasks appeared to be limited: Some strode through terminals on patrols, while others stood at security checkpoints.
  • Trump said Republicans should stop negotiating with Democrats to end the partial shutdown causing the delays, and instead focus on passing voting legislation.

We want to hear from you: Have you experienced travel chaos in the past few days? Tell us about it here. We’ll feature some of your stories in the newsletter.

THE LATEST NEWS

War in the Mideast

Immigration

Two photographs, one of a man and another of a pair of hands holding a passport and a picture of a baby.
Tiko’ Rujux-Xicay was born in Guatemala and was adopted as a baby. Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

Politics

  • The Supreme Court heard arguments over Mississippi’s mail-in voting law, which counts ballots postmarked by Election Day. The court’s conservative majority seemed poised to reject the law.
  • Trump often rails against mail-in voting as fraudulent. He used the method himself to vote in Florida’s special election.
  • The Trump administration said it would pay a French company nearly $1 billion to abandon its plans to build wind farms off the East Coast.

Around the World

Other Big Stories

OPINIONS

Trump has made it harder to produce semiconductor chips domestically. That hurts America’s security and economic stability, German Lopez writes.

Women are 73 percent more likely to be severely injured in vehicle crashes than men. The filmmaker Eve Van Dyke explains why. Click to watch.

A short video of dancing crash-test dummies.
The New York Times

Morning readers: Save on the complete Times experience.

Experience all of The Times, all in one subscription — all with this introductory offer. You’ll gain unlimited access to news and analysis, plus games, recipes, product reviews and more.

MORNING READS

Two warmly dressed people stand in a snowy landscape after dark. Snowmobiles and sledges are near them.
Units from the Canadian Army’s Long Range Patrol. Renaud Philippe for The New York Times

Frozen out: Canada’s military took its big guns to the High Arctic. There were some issues.

Bad apple: What’s with all those A.I. videos of fruits cheating on each other?

Public theology: When a whole society is facing a crisis, what voices and sources help us navigate our collective struggle? Lauren Jackson explores the question in the Believing newsletter.

Metropolitan Diary: One-drink maximum.

TODAY’S NUMBER

250

— That is how many innings of baseball Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers pitched in 2011. No pitcher has thrown that many innings since. Here’s why.

SPORTS

M.L.B.: The pitcher Max Scherzer credits the piano with saving his career after surgeons couldn’t relieve the pain in his right thumb.