Science In 2025 Took A Hit. What Does It Mean?
13 min
•Dec 31, 20254 months agoSummary
The episode examines how the Trump administration's cuts to federal science funding in 2025 have disrupted research across major agencies like the NIH, NSF, NASA, and NOAA. Thousands of scientists face layoffs, canceled grants, and uncertainty, with concerns that the U.S. may lose its position as the world's leading scientific powerhouse and that young scientists are considering leaving the country.
Insights
- Federal science funding cuts are causing immediate brain drain, with young scientists actively considering emigration to Canada and other countries due to loss of trust in U.S. research stability
- The disruption extends beyond direct funding losses—morale collapse and anonymous 'drone attacks' on DEI-related research are creating a chilling effect on institutional culture and scientific recruitment
- The administration frames cuts as necessary reform to make science more 'innovative' and outcome-focused (measured by life expectancy gains), but scientists argue this politicizes research priorities
- The U.S. scientific enterprise built post-WWII on bipartisan commitment to research funding faces its first major crisis of confidence across administrations, potentially fracturing the 80-year 'grand bargain'
- Cuts to early-career scientist funding and grant uncertainty threaten the pipeline of next-generation researchers, with ripple effects on STEM education and national competitiveness
Trends
Government politicization of scientific research priorities, particularly around DEI-related funding and project selectionInternational brain drain of U.S.-trained scientists seeking stable funding environments in Canada and other countriesShift from long-term basic research investment to short-term outcome-focused metrics (life expectancy, innovation) as justification for cutsInstitutional morale collapse and staff departures from federal science agencies after 18+ years of serviceUncertainty in multi-year research projects and mission continuity (e.g., NASA's Juno mission) affecting long-term scientific planningLoss of confidence in U.S. scientific leadership among young researchers at critical career inflection pointsErosion of bipartisan consensus on federal science funding that has existed since post-WWII eraReputational risk to U.S. biomedical research sector globally as funding instability becomes apparent
Topics
Federal science funding cuts and budget disruptionsNIH grant cancellations and research terminationDEI-related research funding eliminationNational Science Foundation grant cancellationsNASA mission funding uncertaintyNOAA research disruptionBrain drain and scientist emigrationEarly-career scientist career uncertaintyFederal agency staffing freezes and layoffsBiomedical research competitivenessScience policy and government administrationResearch funding stability and trustSTEM education pipeline impactLife expectancy and public health outcomesU.S. scientific leadership and global competitiveness
Companies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Largest public funder of biomedical science globally; experienced thousands of staff cuts and billions in grant termi...
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Federal agency that canceled over 1,500 grants representing $1+ billion in lost funding, many DEI-related projects
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Federal science agency that experienced research disruption and funding uncertainty in 2025
NASA
Space agency facing mission funding uncertainty; Juno Jupiter mission cited as example of projects in limbo
National Cancer Institute
Part of NIH; manages cancer research grants affected by anonymous terminations of DEI-related projects
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Federal health agency cited by administration as needing institutional reform and 'shaking up'
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Federal health agency cited by administration as needing institutional reform and 'shaking up'
Department of Veterans Affairs
Federal agency that experienced disrupted studies and major research projects put into limbo
University of California, Santa Barbara
Home to historian Patrick McCray who provided historical context on post-WWII science funding
University of California, San Francisco
Affiliated with Bruce Alberts, former National Academy of Sciences director commenting on science funding crisis
National Academy of Sciences
Scientific institution whose former leader Bruce Alberts expressed grave concerns about U.S. scientific damage
University of Colorado
Employs astrophysicist Fran Baganel working on NASA's Juno mission facing funding uncertainty
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Employs young scientist Brandon Coventry whose NIH funding was revoked, prompting consideration of emigration
People
Emily Kwong
Host of Shortwave podcast leading discussion on 2025 science funding disruptions
Rob Stein
Reported on NIH disruptions, staff morale, and administration's perspective on science funding changes
Katie Riddle
Covered disruptions at NOAA, NASA, NSF and interviewed young scientists considering leaving the U.S.
Patrick McCray
Provided historical analysis of post-WWII science funding and Vannevar Bush's role in establishing U.S. science system
Vannevar Bush
1945 report author credited with establishing framework for U.S. government science investment post-WWII
Bruce Alberts
Expressed grave concerns that current science cuts represent 'shooting ourselves in the foot' for U.S. leadership
Sylvia Joe
Described anonymous 'drone attacks' terminating DEI-related research; leaving NIH after 18 years due to demoralization
Francis Collins
Led NIH through multiple administrations; criticized 2025 cuts as 'move fast and break things' approach
Fran Baganel
Works on NASA's Juno mission; expressed concern that reduced federal science support impacts next-generation scientis...
J Bartataria
Current NIH director defending cuts as necessary reforms to fund more innovative science and improve health outcomes
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Health secretary whose influence over NIH priorities is defended by director as non-politicizing
Brandon Coventry
Young NIH-funded researcher whose grant was revoked; actively considering emigration to Canada due to lost trust in U...
Quotes
"It's very tragic and very distressing where everybody cares about the future of our country. And for all those who care about U.S. prosperity and U.S. leadership in the world, it's just, you know, shooting ourselves in the foot."
Bruce Alberts, former National Academy of Sciences director
"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 absolutely soul crushing."
Sylvia Joe, Grant Manager at National Cancer Institute
"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."
Francis Collins, former NIH Director
"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."
Fran Baganel, Astrophysicist at University of Colorado
"If I move, that's permanent. And at this point, I'm 100% willing to do that because, like, 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."
Brandon Coventry, Young Scientist at University of Wisconsin-Madison
Full Transcript