US science funding was a bipartisan priority. Now it’s a target of federal cuts.

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At universities, spring is a season of faculty hiring, Ph.D. acceptances, and postdoctoral appointments. But this year has become a season of turmoil and trepidation at institutions that rely on federal funding for science and technology research, as the Trump administration wages a highly publicized war on government waste that feels, to some in academia, like a war on publicly funded science.

Bipartisan support for basic science and the discoveries that it has yielded, from space probes and touch screens to vaccines and genome sequencing, was once seen as impregnable. Dominance in international scientific research was a national priority that underpinned U.S. economic and military prowess. But under President Donald Trump, partisan battles over politicized science and institutional calcification have begun to throttle the federal spigot that funds researchers.

“I’ve never seen anything even remotely similar to what’s going on,” says Michael Lubell, a physicist at the City College of New York and a Democrat who previously worked on science policy and funding on Capitol Hill. “The science community is in a state of shock.”

Why We Wrote This

​Publicly funded research has long fueled U.S. leadership in the sciences. The Trump administration calls for reforms in this arena, but many researchers say funding cuts are putting a national strength at risk.

The policy changes include a near-total freeze on funding and grant approvals by the National Institutes of Health, which provides more than $35 billion in annual grants that flow to more than 300,000 researchers at universities, medical schools, and other research institutions. NIH also said it would cut overhead payments as a percentage of grants to 15%, down from an average of 40%, a potential shortfall of billions of dollars. (A federal court in Boston put a temporary halt to this new funding formula last month.)

Science educator Bill Nye speaks during the Stand Up for Science rally near the Lincoln Memorial, March 7, 2025, in Washington. Demonstrators protested Trump administration actions including a freeze on funding for scientific research and staff cuts at the National Science Foundation.

The National Science Foundation, which supports academic research in physics and chemistry, has cut its workforce and is reportedly targeted for deeper cuts. Federal grants have been halted due to alleged noncompliance with Mr. Trump’s executive orders to end diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs. And biologists, engineers, and other scientific experts are leaving or being forced out of federal agencies.

The Trump administration defends cutting the “indirect costs” that NIH pays to grantees as in line with private funders of scientific research, and it argues that universities should pare their bloated bureaucracies. Researchers say the extra money pays for equipment, lab space, waste disposal, and other common costs shared across projects.

Beyond cutting spending, the administration hasn’t outlined an overall science strategy. Mr. Trump has nominated Michael Kratsios to direct his Office of Science and Technology Policy. Mr. Kratsios has no science expertise; he is a technology investor who worked in the first Trump administration. He told a Senate hearing that steep cuts to science-agency budgets was a matter for the White House and its budget unit.

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