Blue States That Sued Kept Most CDC Grants, While Red States Feel Brunt of Trump Clawbacks


Trump’s discounts have occurred while the United States has recorded its strongest measles epidemic in more than three decades and 266 pediatric deaths in the last season of the flu – the highest reported outside a pandemic since 2004. Public health services have canceled the clinics of vaccines, dismissed the staff and suspended contracts, announced health officials during health officials. interviews.
After its financing cuts were blocked in court, California has kept all the subsidies that the Trump administration has tried to recover, while Texas remains the state with the most grants at the end, with at least 30. While the CDC reduced the subsidies to Texas, its measles epidemic spread to the United States and Mexico, ecoering at least 4,500 people.
The Colorado, who joined the trial, first had 11 layoffs, but 10 years were preserved. Meanwhile, its neighboring states that did not continue – Wyoming, Utah, Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma – have collectively lost 55 subsidies, without any conservation.
In Jackson, Ohio, half a dozen community health workers came to work one day in March to find that the Trump administration had canceled its subsidy five months earlier, leaving the Jackson County Health Department for half a million dollars-and them unemployed.
“I had to dismiss three employees in one day, and I had no longer to do so.
At one point, he said, funding helped 11 Ohio Appalachian counties. Now he supports one.
Marsha Radabaugh, an employee who has been reassigned, reduced her community health efforts: she had helped serve hot meals for the homeless and realized that many customers could not read or write, so she brought forms for services such as Medicaid and the additional nutrition aid program to their camp in a local park and helped fill them.
“We would find them rehabilitation places. We came out of hygiene kits, blankets, tents, zero degree sleeping bags, things like that, “she said. As an advisor, she will also remind people “that they are taken care of, that they are worthy of being a human – because, most of the time, they are not treated in this way.”
Sasha Johnson, who directed the program of community health workers, said that people like Radabaugh “were essentially a human 411 who walks”, offering aid to those who needed it.
Radabaugh has also teamed up with a food bank to deliver meals to home residents.
Aston said that the abrupt way in which they had lost the funds – which meant that the county had to pay unemployment for more people – could have ruined the health district financially. Cancel funding in the middle of the cycle, he said, “was really scary.”
HHS secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a long-standing anti-vaccine activist and promoter of the disinformation of vaccines, described the CDC as “corruption power”. In HHS, he took measures to undermine vaccination in the United States and abroad.
Federal funding of the CDC represents more than half of the budgets of health and local departments, according to KFF, a non -profit organization of health information that includes KFF Health News. Said that President Donald Trump won in the 2024 elections received a higher share of the $ 15 billion that the CDC allocated during the 2023 fiscal year that Democrat Kamala Harris won, KFF.
The Trump Administration’s CDC grant national grant reflect this. More than half were in the States that Trump won in 2024, totaling at least 370 layoffs before the action of the court, according to the analysis of Kff Health News.
The Columbus Health Department, Ohio, had received $ 6.2 million in CDC subsidies, but about half of it – $ 3 million – has disappeared with Trump cuts. The city has dismissed 11 people who worked to investigate epidemics of infectious diseases in places such as schools and nursing homes, said Columbus health commissioner, Mysheika Roberts.
She also said that the City had planned to buy a new electronic health file system for easier access to patient hospital files – which could improve disease detection and provide better treatment for infected people – but this has been on ice.
“We have never had a grant in the midst of us, we are not withdrawn from us for no reason,” said Roberts. “This feeling of uncertainty is stressful.”
Columbus did not receive his money directly from the CDC. Rather, the state has given the city funds it received from the federal government. Ohio, led by Republican Governor Mike Dewine and a republican prosecutor, did not continue to block the financing cups.
Columbus continued the federal government in April to keep its money, as well as other municipalities led by democrats in the states provoked by Les Républicains: Harris County, Texas, which houses Houston; The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and the County of Davidson in Tennessee; And Kansas City, Missouri. A federal judge in June blocked these cuts.
In mid-August, Columbus awaited the funds. Roberts said that the city will not rehire the staff because federal funding should end in December.
Joe Grogan, principal researcher at the Schaeffer Institute of the University of California and former director of the National Policy Council of the White House in the first term of Trump, said that state agencies and local “were not entitled” to federal money, which was awarded “to treat an emergency” which ended.
“We were throwing money through the door in the past five years,” said Grogan about the federal government. “I don’t understand why there would never be a controversy in the whistled money not spent.”
Ken Gordon, spokesperson for the Ohio Ministry of Health, wrote in an e-mail that the $ 250 million in lost grants had contributed, among other things, to improve the disease declaration system and stimulate public health laboratory tests.
Part of the financing of the canceled HHS was not to end for years, including four subsidies to strengthen public health in the Indian country, a subsidy to a non-profit organization of Minnesota focused on the reduction of substance consumption disorders, and some to universities on professional security, HIV, tuberculosis, etc.
Brent Ewig, head of government policy and relations for the Association of Immunization Managers, said that the cuts were “the foreseeable result of” Boom, Bush, Panic, “funding” for public health.
The association represents 64 programs for the immunization of states, local and territorial, which, according to Ewig, will be less prepared to respond to epidemics of diseases, including measles.
“The system flashes red,” said Ewig.



