HHS Dismantlement Under RFK Jr. Fuels Worst Measles Outbreak in 30 Years

RFK Jr.'s dismantlement of federal health agencies during an active measles crisis — including firing vaccine advisors, cutting thousands of positions, and clawing back billions — has resulted in the worst measles outbreak in 30+ years and threatens America's measles-elimination status.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. cut approximately 20,000 HHS positions, gutted the CDC, fired the entire vaccine advisory committee, and clawed back over $12 billion in public health funding. During this dismantlement, the US experienced its worst measles outbreak in over 30 years — 2,285+ cases and at least 3 deaths — and stands poised to lose its measles-free status for the first time.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • RFK Jr. ordered approximately 10,000 HHS layoffs in March 2025, on top of 10,000 voluntary departures, shrinking the workforce by roughly 25% to 62,000 employees. This included over 1,000 CDC employees in a single 'Friday night massacre.'
  • Over $12 billion in COVID-era public health infrastructure grants were clawed back — funding that had been supporting measles surveillance, vaccination programs, and general public health capacity beyond pandemic needs.
  • RFK Jr. fired the entire 17-member Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), the CDC's expert vaccine panel, in an unprecedented move. He also asked the CDC for new measles treatment guidance based on his unfounded claims about vaccines.
  • In 2025, the US recorded 2,285+ measles cases — the most in over 30 years — with at least 3 deaths (two unvaccinated children in Texas, one unvaccinated adult in New Mexico). The US is poised to lose its measles-free elimination status.
  • The CDC buried a measles forecast that stressed the need for vaccinations, and CDC social media went silent during the outbreak, leaving a void filled by news media and misinformation.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Texas measles outbreak begins

    A measles outbreak begins in West Texas, concentrated in communities with low vaccination rates. It will eventually become the epicenter of the worst US measles year in over three decades.

  2. RFK Jr. orders 10,000 HHS job cuts

    Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announces 10,000 layoffs across HHS agencies including the CDC, FDA, NIH, and CMS. Combined with 10,000 prior voluntary departures, HHS loses approximately a quarter of its workforce.

  3. Minority health offices cut

    RFK Jr. cuts jobs at minority health offices across HHS, eliminating staff focused on health equity and reducing disparities in vaccination rates among vulnerable populations.

  4. Entire vaccine advisory committee fired

    RFK Jr. removes all 17 current members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), the expert body that advises on the national vaccine schedule. The mass firing is unprecedented in the committee's history.

  5. CDC immunization director resigns in protest

    Demetre Daskalakis, former director of the CDC's national immunization center, resigns in protest of Kennedy's actions, stating that the dismantlement is endangering public health.

  6. Measles cases hit 34-year high

    Axios reports 2,285+ confirmed measles cases in 2025, the most in over 30 years. At least three people have died. The CDC had buried a measles forecast stressing the need for vaccinations.

  7. US poised to lose measles-free status

    RFK Jr.'s new CDC deputy Ralph Abraham downplays the significance as the US faces losing its measles elimination status. To maintain the status, the US must prove measles has not circulated continuously for a year — a threshold now in jeopardy.

  8. RFK Jr. defends CDC overhaul amid continuing outbreaks

    RFK Jr. touts the measles response as a defense of his CDC overhaul, even as the agency remains severely weakened and measles outbreaks continue into 2026.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

In 2025, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a long-time vaccine skeptic — systematically dismantled the federal public health infrastructure. The cuts were sweeping: approximately 20,000 positions eliminated (10,000 layoffs plus 10,000 voluntary departures), over $12 billion in public health funding clawed back, the entire CDC vaccine advisory committee fired, and the agency's ability to respond to disease outbreaks severely degraded.

This dismantlement occurred during the worst measles outbreak in the United States in over 30 years.

The Scale of Destruction

In March 2025, RFK Jr. ordered 10,000 layoffs across HHS, affecting the CDC, FDA, NIH, and CMS. In a single action later described as the "Friday night massacre," over 1,000 CDC employees were let go. Combined with 10,000 earlier voluntary departures, HHS lost approximately a quarter of its total workforce.

The cuts went far beyond personnel. Over $12 billion in COVID-era public health grants were clawed back — funding that had been repurposed to strengthen measles surveillance, vaccination programs, and general public health capacity. The FY 2026 budget proposed an additional 26% cut to HHS discretionary spending, including $18 billion from NIH and $3.6 billion from the CDC.

In June 2025, RFK Jr. took the unprecedented step of firing all 17 members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), the expert body that had advised the CDC on vaccine schedules for decades. He also asked the CDC to develop new measles treatment guidance based on his unfounded claims about vaccine safety.

The Measles Crisis

The consequences were immediate and measurable. In 2025, the United States recorded 2,285 confirmed measles cases — the most in over 30 years. At least three people died: two unvaccinated children in Texas and one unvaccinated adult in New Mexico. A child in Los Angeles County died from measles-related complications.

ProPublica reported that the CDC buried an internal measles forecast that stressed the urgent need for vaccinations. The agency's social media accounts went silent during the outbreak, leaving an information void that was filled by misinformation. The Trump administration impeded the CDC's ability to assist West Texas during the first critical weeks of its outbreak and slowed the release of federal emergency funds.

By January 2026, the United States stood poised to lose its measles elimination status — a designation earned through decades of public health work. RFK Jr.'s newly appointed CDC deputy, Ralph Abraham, publicly downplayed the significance of this loss.

Why This Matters

The dismantlement of federal health agencies during an active disease outbreak represents a deliberate degradation of the state's capacity to protect public health. The right to health is enshrined in multiple international instruments, including the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Article 12) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article 24).

The measles deaths — all among unvaccinated individuals — occurred in the context of a Health Secretary who has spent decades promoting vaccine skepticism, fired the expert advisory committee, buried the CDC's own warnings, and cut the funding and staff needed to respond. This is not a natural disaster. It is a policy-induced public health catastrophe.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

  1. RFK Jr. orders 10,000 HHS job cuts in major health agency shakeup STAT News
  2. RFK Jr. removes all current members of CDC vaccine advisory committee CNN
  3. In a tumultuous year, U.S. health policy transforms under RFK Jr. PBS
  4. The CDC Buried a Measles Forecast That Stressed the Need for Vaccinations ProPublica
  5. U.S. measles cases reach highest level in over 30 years Axios
  6. As US Is Poised To Lose Measles-Free Status, RFK Jr.'s New CDC Deputy Downplays Its Significance KFF Health News
  7. As U.S. is poised to lose measles-free status, RFK Jr.'s new CDC deputy downplays its significance CBS News
  8. 'CDC is over': RFK Jr. lays off over 1,000 employees in Friday night massacre MSNBC

Related records

Read this record in context