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The Trump Administration Threatens mRNA Research

Happy Thursday! And happy Opening Day to all who celebrate (even Cubs and Dodgers fans, despite the fact their teams already played in Tokyo last week). As Charlie Hustle, aka Pete Rose, once said: “Opening Day is like Christmas, except it’s warmer.”

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The Atlantic on Wednesday published the full text thread in which top administration officials discussed plans for a U.S. military campaign targeting the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. In the communications—conducted over a Signal group chat to which Atlantic editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg was inadvertently added—Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth shared sensitive operational details about the March 15 airstrikes on the same day they were carried out. Appearing to contradict administration officials’ insistence that the chat did not divulge classified information, the messages included information about the timing of attacks using F-18 fighter jets, MQ-9 drones, and Tomahawk cruise missiles. “If this text had been received by someone hostile to American interests—or someone merely indiscreet, and with access to social media—the Houthis would have had time to prepare for what was meant to be a surprise attack on their strongholds,” Goldberg noted in the report. “The consequences for American pilots could have been catastrophic.”
  • The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) have retaken the country’s capital of Khartoum, Sudan’s military chief, Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, announced Wednesday. The capital city has been at the center of fighting throughout the nearly two-year civil war between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which as of late 2024 had left more than 28,000 people dead nationwide and displaced 11 million others. The capture of Khartoum and its international airport marked a key victory for the SAF, though fighting is likely to continue as the RSF fighters dig in in the western Darfur region.
  • Brazil’s Supreme Court unanimously ruled Wednesday that former President Jair Bolsonaro must stand trial for allegedly attempting to overturn his loss in the country’s 2022 election and planning a coup. Prosecutors accuse the country’s former leader of plotting to kill his successor, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, as well as the vice president and a Supreme Court justice. Bolsonaro, who has long denied the charges against him, said Wednesday that he is facing a “political trial” aimed at preventing him from running for president in 2026. The justices said that seven of Bolsonaro’s political allies should also stand trial on five counts for their alleged involvement in the scheme. 
  • President Donald Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order imposing 25 percent tariffs on cars and car parts imported into the United States. The new duties, which are intended to boost the domestic auto industry, are expected to hit both foreign manufacturers and American automakers who build cars abroad or import components. However, the White House later noted that auto parts covered by the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Agreement (USMCA) would be exempt until Customs and Border Protection “establishes a process to apply tariffs to their non-U.S. content.” The measures are set to take effect on April 3 at 12:01 a.m. ET. 
  • The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit on Wednesday denied a request by the Trump administration to reverse a block on its efforts to pause federal funding to states. The decision, which bars the Office of Management and Budget from implementing a now-rescinded January memo freezing federal payments, came in response to lawsuits brought by attorneys general from 22 states and the District of Columbia. In an opinion upholding U.S. District Judge John McConnell’s ruling earlier this month, the three-judge panel wrote that the freeze would result in a “number of harms” to the plaintiff states, including “the inability to pay existing debt; impediments to planning, hiring, and operations; and disruptions to research projects by state universities.”

What’s Up With mRNA Research?

A research nurse holds an injection of a BioNTech mRNA cancer immunotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer. (Photo by Aaron Chown/PA Images via Getty Images)
A research nurse holds an injection of a BioNTech mRNA cancer immunotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer. (Photo by Aaron Chown/PA Images via Getty Images)

Health and Human Services Secretary (HHS) Robert F. Kennedy Jr. may not be chatty on Signal, but he’s making plenty of noise in the medical world. Just over a month into his tenure, Kennedy is beginning to reverse one of the first Trump administration’s major successes: mRNA vaccines. 

As COVID-19 spread across the U.S. in 2020, the Trump administration launched Operation Warp Speed—an initiative that brought the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine to market in record time. But with the pandemic also came a revival of vaccine skepticism. Now, with Kennedy atop HHS, that anti-vax sentiment is making its way to the highest levels of government just as scientists are achieving striking breakthroughs in mRNA research.

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