Texas schools have leaned on uncertified teachers to fill vacancies. Lawmakers want to put a stop to it.
Lawmakers want to turn the tide on the growing number of unprepared and uncertified teachers by restricting who can lead Texas classrooms. But school leaders worry those limits will leave them with fewer options to refill their teacher ranks.
Tucked inside the Texas House's $7.6 billion school finance package is a provision that would ban uncertified teachers from instructing core classes in public schools. House Bill 2 gives districts until fall 2026 to certify their K-5 math and reading teachers and until fall 2027 to certify teachers in other academic classes.
Texas would help uncertified teachers pay for the cost of getting credentialed. Under HB 2, those who participate in an in-school training and mentoring program would receive a one-time $10,000 payment and those who go through a traditional university or alternative certification program would get $3,000. Special education and emergent bilingual teachers would get their certification fees waived. Educator training experts say it could be the biggest financial investment Texas made in teacher preparation.
District leaders, once reluctant to hire uncertified teachers, now rely on them often to respond to the state's growing teacher shortage. And while they agree with the spirit of the legislation, some worry the bill would ask too much too soon of districts and doesn't offer a meaningful solution to replace uncertified teachers who leave the profession.
'What's going to happen when we're no longer able to hire uncertified teachers? Class sizes have to go up, programs have to disappear…. We won't have a choice,' said David Vroonland, director of the education research group LEARN and a former superintendent. 'There will be negative consequences if we don't put in place serious recruitment efforts.'
Nowadays, superintendents often go to job fairs to recruit teachers and come out empty-handed. There are not as many Texans who want to be teachers as there used to be.
The salary in Texas is about $9,000 less than the national average, so people choose better-paying careers. Teachers say they are overworked, sometimes navigating unwieldy class sizes and using weekends to catch up on grading.
Heath Morrison started to see the pool of teacher applicants shrink years ago when he was at the helm of Montgomery ISD. Many teachers left the job during the COVID-19 pandemic, which accelerated the problem.
'This teacher shortage is getting more and more pronounced,' said Morrison, who is now the CEO of Teachers of Tomorrow, a popular alternative teacher certification program. 'The reality of most school districts across the country is you're not making a whole lot more money 10 years into your job than you were when you first entered … And so that becomes a deterrent.'
As the pool of certified teachers shrunk, districts found a stopgap solution: bringing on uncertified teachers. Uncertified teachers accounted for roughly 38% of newly hired instructors last year, with many concentrated in rural districts.
The Texas Legislature facilitated the flood of uncertified teachers. A 2015 law lets public schools get exemptions from requirements like teacher certification, school start dates and class sizes — the same exemptions allowed for open enrollment charter schools.
Usually, to teach in Texas classrooms, candidates must obtain a certification by earning a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university, completing an educator preparation program and passing teacher certification exams.
Teacher preparation experts say certifications give teachers the tools to lead a high quality classroom. To pass certification tests, teaching candidates have to learn how to plan for lessons and manage discipline in a classroom.
But the 2015 law allowed districts to hire uncertified teachers by presenting a so-called 'district of innovation plan' to show they were struggling to meet credential requirements because of a teacher shortage. By 2018, more than 600 rural and urban districts had gotten teacher certification exemptions.
'Now, what we've seen is everyone can demonstrate a shortage,' said Jacob Kirksey, a researcher at Texas Tech University. 'Almost every district in Texas is a district of innovation. That is what has allowed for the influx of uncertified teachers. Everybody is getting that waiver for certification requirements.'
This session, House lawmakers are steadfast on undoing the loophole they created after new research from Kirksey sounded the alarm on the impacts of unprepared teachers on student learning. Students with new uncertified teachers lost about four months of learning in reading and three months in math, his analysis found. They missed class more than students with certified teachers, a signal of disengagement.
Uncertified teachers are also less likely to stick with the job long-term, disrupting school stability.
'The state should act urgently on how to address the number of uncertified teachers in classrooms,' said Kate Greer, a policy director at Commit Partnership. The bill 'rights a wrong that we've had in the state for a long time.'
Rep. Jeff Leach, a Plano Republican who sits on the House Public Education Committee, said his wife has worked as an uncertified art teacher at Allen ISD. She started a program to get certified this winter and had to pay $5,000 out of pocket.
That cost may be 'not only a hurdle but an impediment for someone who wants to teach and is called and equipped to teach,' Leach said earlier this month during a committee hearing on HB 2.
House lawmakers are proposing to lower the financial barriers that keep Texans who want to become teachers from getting certified.
'Quality preparation takes longer, is harder and it's more expensive. In the past, we've given [uncertified candidates] an opportunity just to walk into the classroom,' said Jean Streepey, the chair of the State Board for Educator Certification. 'How do we help teachers at the beginning of their journey to choose something that's longer, harder and more expensive?'
Streepey sat on the teacher vacancy task force that Gov. Greg Abbott established in 2022 to recommend fixes to retention and recruitment challenges at Texas schools. The task force's recommendations, such as prioritizing raises and improving training, have fingerprints all over the Texas House's school finance package.
Under HB 2, districts would see money flow in when they put uncertified teachers on the path to certification. And those financial rewards would be higher depending on the quality of the certification program.
Schools with instructors who complete yearlong teacher residencies — which include classroom training and are widely seen as the gold standard for preparing teacher candidates — would receive bigger financial rewards than those with teachers who finish traditional university or alternative certification programs.
Even with the financial help, lawmakers are making a tall order. In two years, the more than 35,000 uncertified teachers in the state would have to get their credential or be replaced with new, certified teachers.
'The shortages have grown to be so great that I think none of us have a really firm handle on the measures that it's going to take to turn things around.' said Michael Marder, the executive director of UTeach, a UT-Austin teacher preparatory program. 'There is financial support in HB 2 to try to move us back towards the previous situation. However, I just don't know whether the amounts that are laid out there are sufficient.'
Only one in five uncertified teachers from 2017 to 2020 went on to get a credential within their first three years of teaching. Texas can expect a jump in uncertified teachers going through teacher preparatory programs because of the financial resources and pressure on schools through HB 2, Marder said.
But for every teacher who does not get credentialed, school leaders will have to go out and find new teachers. And they will have to look from a smaller pool.
The restrictions on uncertified teachers 'handcuffs us,'said Gilbert Trevino, the superintendent at Floydada Collegiate ISD, which sits in a rural farming town in West Texas. In recent years, recruiters with his district have gone out to job fairs and hired uncertified teachers with a college degree and field experience in the subjects they want to teach in.
Rural schools across the state have acutely experienced the challenges of the teacher shortage — and have leaned on uncertified teachers more heavily than their urban peers.
'We have to recruit locally and grow our own or hire people who have connections or roots in the community,' Trevino said. 'If we hire a teacher straight out of Texas Tech University, we may have them for a year. … And then they may get on at Lubbock ISD or Plainview ISD, where there's more of a social life.'
Floydada Collegiate ISD recruits local high school students who are working toward their associate's degree through what is known as a Grown Your Own Teacher program. But Trevino says HB 2 does not give him the time to use this program to replace uncertified teachers. From recruitment to graduation, it takes at least three years before students can lead a classroom on their own, he said.
School leaders fear if they can't fill all their vacancies, they'll be pushed to increase class sizes or ask their teachers to prepare lessons for multiple subjects.
'Our smaller districts are already doing that, where teachers have multiple preps,' Trevino said. 'Things are already hard on our teachers. So if you add more to their plate, how likely are they to remain in the profession or remain in this district?'
At Wylie ISD, which sits in Collin County, one of the fastest-growing counties in the country, it's been difficult to find teachers to keep up with student growth. Uncertified teachers in recent years have made up a large number of teacher applicants, according to Cameron Wiley, a school board trustee.
Wiley said restrictions on uncertified teachers is a 'good end goal' but would compound the district's struggles.
'It limits the pot of people that's already small to a smaller pot. That's just going to make it more difficult to recruit,' Wiley said. 'And if we have a hard time finding people to come in, or we're not allowed to hire certain people to take some of that pressure off, those class sizes are just going to get bigger.'
Learning suffers when class sizes get too big because students are not able to get the attention they need.
'This bill, it's just another obstacle that we as districts are having to maneuver around and hurl over,' Wiley said. 'We're not addressing the root cause [recruitment]. We're just putting a Band-Aid on it right now.'
Disclosure: Commit Partnership and Texas Tech University have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
We can't wait to welcome you to the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Texas' breakout ideas and politics event happening Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Step inside the conversations shaping the future of education, the economy, health care, energy, technology, public safety, culture, the arts and so much more.
Hear from our CEO, Sonal Shah, on TribFest 2025.
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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The Most Extreme Voice on RFK Jr.'s New Vaccine Committee
The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. Robert Malone has a history of arguing against the data. He has called for an end to the use of mRNA vaccines for COVID despite the well-established fact that they reduce mortality and severe illness. He has promoted discredited COVID treatments such as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, dismissing studies that show they are ineffective against the coronavirus. Recently, he called reports about two girls in West Texas dying from the measles 'misinformation,' even though the doctors who treated the girls were unequivocal in their conclusion. Now Malone will have a leading role in shaping America's vaccine policy. He is one of eight new members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing the 17 former members whom Robert F. Kennedy Jr. relieved of their duties on Monday. The re-formed committee will be responsible for guiding the CDC's vaccine policy, recommending when and by whom vaccines should be used. The doctors and researchers who make up the new ACIP are all, to some degree, ideological allies of Kennedy, who has spent decades undermining public confidence in vaccines. And Malone arguably has the most extreme views of the group. Malone, a physician and an infectious-disease researcher, readily acknowledges that he defies mainstream scientific consensus. Just this week, he wrote in his popular Substack newsletter that readers should embrace the anti-vax label, as he has done, and oppose 'the madness of the vaccine mania that has swept public health and government.' (This was only a day before Kennedy pledged that the new ACIP members would not be 'ideological anti-vaxxers.') He is also openly conspiratorial. In his best-selling book, Lies My Gov't Told Me: And the Better Future Coming, Malone alleges that the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative's grants to news publications (including The Atlantic) were payments 'to smear' vaccine critics, and accuses Anthony Fauci of fearmongering to amass power. Last fall, Malone and his wife, Jill, released a follow-up, PsyWar, making the case that the U.S. government is engaged in a vague but diabolical program of psychological warfare against its own citizens. According to the Malones, the CIA, FBI, and Defense Department, along with a 'censorship-industrial complex,' have granted the U.S. government 'reality-bending information control capabilities.' (They also claim that 'sexual favors are routinely exchanged to seal short-term alliances, both within agencies and between contractors and 'Govies.'') They envision this corruption spawning a postapocalyptic future in which guns, ammo, horses, and 'a well-developed network of like-minded friends' might be necessary for survival. Malone, who lives on a horse farm in Virginia, appears to be already well prepared. [Listen: How fragile is our vaccine infrastructure?] Malone's rise to contrarian glory began in the summer of 2021, when public-health officials were urging hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves for the new, mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines. Back in the 1980s, Malone had conducted research on delivering RNA and DNA into cells, which, he and his co-authors suggested in a 1990 paper, 'may provide alternative approaches to vaccine development.' That early work lent credibility to his dire warnings that the COVID shots hadn't been adequately tested, as perhaps did his grandfatherly beard and professorial demeanor. His popularity grew with appearances on Tucker Carlson's and Glenn Beck's shows, where he questioned the safety and effectiveness of the mRNA vaccines while touting—and, critics said, overstating—his own role in the development of the underlying technology. It was Malone's conspiratorial musings on The Joe Rogan Experience that prompted several famous musicians, including Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, to pull their music from Spotify in protest of the platform's contract with Rogan. Today, Malone's newsletter, where he shares his anti-vaccine claims and often praises Kennedy, has more than 350,000 subscribers. Kennedy and Malone have long been intertwined. Kennedy wrote the foreword to Lies My Gov't Told Me and wrote an endorsement for PsyWar, alleging that the same techniques that the Malones described shaped public reaction to the assassinations of his father and uncle. Kennedy's 2021 book, The Real Anthony Fauci—which alleges that the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases spread corruption and fraud—is dedicated to Malone, among others. Since Kennedy was appointed as Health and Human Services secretary, many of his allies in the anti-vaccine world have accused him of moderating his views to be more palatable to lawmakers. But among anti-vaccine activists, Malone's appointment to the advisory board was taken as evidence that Kennedy remains on their side. Public-health experts, by contrast, are horrified. 'I think that the scientific and medical community won't trust this committee, and for good reason,' Paul Offit, a pediatrician and former member of the advisory group, told me. He's heard from fellow public-health experts who are considering forming their own committees to weigh the evidence, 'because they won't trust the conclusions of these people.' Sean O'Leary, the American Academy of Pediatrics' liaison to ACIP, told me he was 'deeply concerned' with RFK's decision to entirely remake the committee. 'This maneuver really endangers public health. It endangers children,' he said. He worries that it will lead to disease, suffering, and death among adults and children alike. (Neither Malone nor HHS responded to requests for comment. On X, Malone promised to 'do my best to serve with unbiased objectivity and rigor.') [Read: RFK Jr. is barely even pretending anymore] Malone's appointment is perhaps the strongest sign yet of Kennedy's willingness to appoint ideological crusaders into powerful government roles. ACIP's recommendations are nonbinding, but historically, the CDC has almost always hewn to them. The committee's verdicts will help determine which vaccines insurance companies and the federal government pay for, decisions that will inevitably shape countless Americans' immunization habits. Malone's new role requires in-depth, good-faith examinations of scientific evidence. But he has already earned a reputation for rejecting it. Article originally published at The Atlantic


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Iran strikes back at Israel
Thank you for signing up! Subscribe to more newsletters here IRAN RETALIATED with a swarm of drone and missile attacks Friday after Israel launched surprise strikes that killed nearly two dozen senior Iranian officials, bringing the Middle East adversaries to the brink of war and upending President Trump's push for a nuclear deal with Tehran. Israeli officials said Friday Iran's counterattack is 'ongoing,' with the Islamic Republic firing dozens of ballistic missiles and explosions rocking Tel Aviv. The U.S. is reportedly helping Israel shoot down Iranian missiles, while millions of Israelis have rushed into bomb shelters in targeted cities. 'We will take every measure necessary to protect the people of Israel,' Israel's ministry of foreign affairs said Friday on X. The U.S. has sought to distance itself from the Israeli surprise attacks, which wiped out top Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and nuclear scientists, and destroyed several nuclear enrichment and ballistic missile sites. Hours before the strike, Trump warned a unilateral move by Israel would jeopardize U.S. nuclear talks with Iran. Negotiators had planned to meet for the sixth round of talks in Oman on Saturday, but Iran has since pulled out. Trump posted on social media that he's still hopeful for a 'diplomatic solution.' 'Iran must make a deal, before there is nothing left,' he said. 'My entire administration has been directed to negotiate with Iran. They could be a great country, but first they must completely give up hopes of obtaining a nuclear weapon!' In an interview with CNN, Trump said some of the Iranian 'hardliners' he's been negotiating were killed in the strike. 'So what you're saying is Israel has now killed the people who you were dealing with?' CNN's Dana Bash asked. 'They didn't die of the flu, they didn't die of COVID,' Trump responded. Still, the U.S. has offered support for Jerusalem. And the administration is shifting military resources, including ships, in the Middle East, The Associated Press reports. The U.S. had begun moving assets out of the region before the Israeli strike. Secretary of State Marco Rubio insisted that Israel acted alone. 'Tonight, Israel took unilateral action against Iran,' Rubio said. 'We are not involved in strikes against Iran and our top priority is protecting American forces in the region.' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the goal of the operation was to 'damage Iran's nuclear infrastructure, its ballistic missile factories and military capabilities.' 'We struck at the heart of Iran's nuclear enrichment program,' he said. 'We struck at the heart of Iran's nuclear weaponization program. We targeted Iran's leading nuclear scientists working on the Iranian bomb. We also struck at the heart of Iran's ballistic missile program.' Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said 'that [Zionist] regime should anticipate a severe punishment.' 'By God's grace, the powerful arm of the Islamic Republic's Armed Forces won't let them go unpunished,' he posted on X. The stock market dropped Friday and oil spiked on news of the conflict, which will be top of mind as Trump and other world leaders head to Alberta for the Group of Seven (G-7) meetings starting Sunday. REPUBLICANS DIVIDED Many Republicans were quick to signal their support for Israel, but there are growing signs the populist right is ready to break with the longtime U.S. ally. Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), a traditional Republican and staunch ally to Israel, said the U.S. should 'go all-in' to help Israel if Iran refuses a nuclear deal. Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley praised Israel for its strikes, saying 'we owe them a debt of gratitude.' 'Israel took decisive action to put an end to Iran's nuclear capabilities and made America and the world safer,' she said. Trump's former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called for a strong response, warning it's 'fantasy' to think Iran does not pose a threat to the U.S. 'Iran has killed hundreds of American troops,' he posted on X. 'It tried to assassinate an ambassdor in D.C. It tried to kill President Trump. Its leaders chant death to America. We must never let this terrorist regime get a nuclear weapon.' But Tucker Carlson wrote in his influential newsletter that it's time to 'drop Israel' and 'let them fight their own wars.' Carlson said Trump was 'complicit in the act of war.' 'What happens next will define Donald Trump's presidency,' he wrote. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), a fiscal hawk who has steadfastly voted against GOP spending bills, posted on X: 'Israel doesn't need US taxpayers' money for defense if it already has enough to start offensive wars. I vote not to fund this war of aggression.' Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said the U.S. must maintain its commitment to Israel's security. 'The United States' commitment to Israel's security and defense must be ironclad as they prepare for Iran's response,' he said in a statement. 'The Iranian regime's stated policy has long been to destroy Israel and Jewish communities around the world. I have long said that Israel has a right to defend itself and that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Ensuring they never obtain one must remain a top national security priority.' Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) called for Israel to 'keep wiping out Iranian leadership and nuclear personnel.' 💡Perspectives: • CNN: Trump didn't want Israel to strike. They did it anyway. • The Free Press: Everything you need to know about the Iran attack. • The Jerusalem Post: Why Israel acts alone when it needs to defend itself. • Foreign Affairs: How the US could be dragged into the Israel-Iran war. • Tucker Carlson: Drop Israel. Let them fight their own wars. Read more: • Trump's dealmaking meets limits on Israel, Iran and Russia-Ukraine. • 5 takeaways on Israel's unprecedented strikes on Iran • What to know about Iran's nuclear sites. • Who are the officials killed in the Israeli attack on Iran? Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleaded not guilty to human smuggling charges in a Nashville courtroom Friday after being returned to the U.S. from a Salvadoran prison to face trial. A federal appeals court declined President Trump's bid to rehear his appeal of a jury verdict finding him liable for sexually abusing advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, leaving the Supreme Court as Trump's only remaining pathway. Meta is making a $14.3 billion investment in artificial intelligence (AI) company Scale and recruiting its CEO Alexandr Wang to join a team developing 'superintelligence.' Disney and Universal sued a prominent AI start-up for copyright infringement, bringing Hollywood belatedly into the increasingly intense battle over generative AI. © Gabrielle Lurie/San Francisco Chronicle via AP Thousands of protesters are expected to hit the streets this weekend in cities across the country, demonstrating against the Trump administration and the president's immigration policies. Tempers have flared in Washington over the administration's immigration raids, as demonstrations against Immigration and Customs (ICE) have spread to multiple cities. The weekend protests are poised to collide with images of Trump presiding over Saturday's military parade in the nation's capital. Helicopters, war planes and tanks will roll through the streets of Washington, as Trump marks the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army with a show of military might that also falls on his 79th birthday. Rain is in the forecast for the parade, which suddenly takes on heightened significance amid fears the U.S. could be drawn into the war between Israel and Iran. Some have also criticized the event's $45 million price tag. The group 'No Kings' has coordinated protests across the country to counter the military parade. Trump warned earlier this week that unruly protesters at the parade itself would be met with 'very big force.' The 'No Kings' protests coincide with existing protests against ICE deportation raids, which have spread beyond Los Angeles. Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe (R) declared a state of emergency and activated the state's National Guard in anticipation of protests. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has done the same, as demonstrators march in Austin, Dallas and San Antonio. Chicago, Seattle, Spokane, Las Vegas and Tucson are among the other U.S. cities to experience significant protests and instances of vandalism, looting or clashes between the police and protesters. Curfews are in effect in Los Angeles and Spokane. U.S. Marines and National Guard troops remain deployed in Los Angeles, after an appeals court temporarily lifted a judge's block on the troop deployment. The appeals court ruling came after U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ordered the president to return control of the National Guard troops to California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) by Friday. Breyer chastised Trump by invoking the British monarchy. 'That's the difference between a Constitutional government and King George,' Breyer said. 'It's not that a leader can simply say something and it becomes it.' The Trump administration blasted the ruling in its appeal. 'That sort of second-guessing of the Commander in Chief's military judgments is a gross violation of the separation of powers,' the Justice Department wrote. 'Nearly 200 years ago, the Supreme Court made clear that these judgment calls are for the President to make—not a Governor, and certainly not a federal court.' ON CAPITOL HILL... House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) and Subcommittee on Federal Law Enforcement Chairman Clay Higgins (R-La.) wrote a letter to Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) saying they're opening an investigation into the unrest in Los Angeles. 'You falsely claimed that state and local law enforcement had protests under control, however, police were clearly unable to quell the violence in Los Angeles prior to the arrival of the National Guardsmen,' the lawmakers said. That's likely to ignite further anger from Democrats, who are enraged after Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) was handcuffed on the floor after being forcefully removed from a Thursday press conference held by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in LA. 'If this is how this administration responds to a senator with a question, I can only imagine what they're doing to farmworkers, to cooks, to day laborers out in the Los Angeles community and throughout California and throughout the country,' Padilla said. Senate Democrats are calling on Noem to resign. Even some Republicans expressed anger. 'It's horrible. It is shocking at every level. It's not the America I know,' Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) told reporters. Republicans say Padilla was deliberately trying to create a scene by disrupting the press conference in plain clothes. 💡Perspectives: • Whole Hog Politics: Trump enlists the military for politics. • John Kass: Democrats unmask themselves at riots. • L.A. Times: First they came for immigrants, then took our Latino senator. • Wall Street Journal: Diminishing protest returns. Read more: • Newsom becomes a fighter. Democrats beyond California are cheering. • 5 takeaways from the Alex Padilla furor. • Democrat erupts with f-bombs on House floor. • Padilla fundraises off forcible removal from Noem press conference. Here's who's talking this weekend… NewsNation's 'The Hill Sunday': Former Vice President Mike Pence (R), Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio). CNN's 'State of the Union': Pence; Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.); Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D). Fox's 'Fox News Sunday': Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.); Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.). © AP Photo/Kyle Green Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is restarting his successful 'Fighting Oligarchy' tour that has drawn tens of thousands of supporters to rallies in surprising places across the country. Sanders's campaign website set dates for upcoming stops in three cities in Texas — McAllen, Amarillo and Fort Worth. There are also rallies planned in Tulsa, Okla., and Shreveport, La. Event notices say Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) and former Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas) will appear at the Texas events. • Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D), a potential 2028 presidential contender, will speak at the NAACP dinner later this month in battleground Michigan. Moore will talk about the 'work of repair,' while holding up Maryland as an example for Democratic governance. Moore has said he doesn't intend to run for president, but he's attended recent events in swing-state Pennsylvania and in South Carolina, an early primary state. 💡Perspectives: • The Liberal Patriot: There's more to social policy than welfare. • New York: New York is not a democracy. • MSNBC: Republicans are stealing Dem ideas. • Wall Street Journal: The case for rate cuts is growing. • RealClearPolitics: Greta Thunberg, a useful idiot for Hamas. Read more: • David Hogg's DNC exit brings both relief and disappointment. • Grenell discussed possible California governor campaign with Trump. Someone forward this newsletter to you? Sign up to get your own copy: See you next week!


Atlantic
3 hours ago
- Atlantic
The Most Extreme Voice on RFK Jr.'s New Vaccine Committee
Robert Malone has a history of arguing against the data. He has called for an end to the use of mRNA vaccines for COVID despite the well-established fact that they reduce mortality and severe illness. He has promoted discredited COVID treatments such as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, dismissing studies that show they are ineffective against the coronavirus. Recently, he called reports about two girls in West Texas dying from the measles ' misinformation,' even though the doctors who treated the girls were unequivocal in their conclusion. Now Malone will have a leading role in shaping America's vaccine policy. He is one of eight new members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, replacing the 17 former members whom Robert F. Kennedy Jr. relieved of their duties on Monday. The re-formed committee will be responsible for guiding the CDC's vaccine policy, recommending when and by whom vaccines should be used. The doctors and researchers who make up the new ACIP are all, to some degree, ideological allies of Kennedy, who has spent decades undermining public confidence in vaccines. And Malone arguably has the most extreme views of the group. Malone, a physician and an infectious-disease researcher, readily acknowledges that he defies mainstream scientific consensus. Just this week, he wrote in his popular Substack newsletter that readers should embrace the anti-vax label, as he has done, and oppose 'the madness of the vaccine mania that has swept public health and government.' (This was only a day before Kennedy pledged that the new ACIP members would not be 'ideological anti-vaxxers.') He is also openly conspiratorial. In his best-selling book, Lies My Gov't Told Me: And the Better Future Coming, Malone alleges that the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative's grants to news publications (including The Atlantic) were payments 'to smear' vaccine critics, and accuses Anthony Fauci of fearmongering to amass power. Last fall, Malone and his wife, Jill, released a follow-up, PsyWar, making the case that the U.S. government is engaged in a vague but diabolical program of psychological warfare against its own citizens. According to the Malones, the CIA, FBI, and Defense Department, along with a 'censorship-industrial complex,' have granted the U.S. government 'reality-bending information control capabilities.' (They also claim that 'sexual favors are routinely exchanged to seal short-term alliances, both within agencies and between contractors and 'Govies.'') They envision this corruption spawning a postapocalyptic future in which guns, ammo, horses, and 'a well-developed network of like-minded friends' might be necessary for survival. Malone, who lives on a horse farm in Virginia, appears to be already well prepared. Listen: How fragile is our vaccine infrastructure? Malone's rise to contrarian glory began in the summer of 2021, when public-health officials were urging hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves for the new, mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines. Back in the 1980s, Malone had conducted research on delivering RNA and DNA into cells, which, he and his co-authors suggested in a 1990 paper, 'may provide alternative approaches to vaccine development.' That early work lent credibility to his dire warnings that the COVID shots hadn't been adequately tested, as perhaps did his grandfatherly beard and professorial demeanor. His popularity grew with appearances on Tucker Carlson's and Glenn Beck's shows, where he questioned the safety and effectiveness of the mRNA vaccines while touting—and, critics said, overstating—his own role in the development of the underlying technology. It was Malone's conspiratorial musings on The Joe Rogan Experience that prompted several famous musicians, including Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, to pull their music from Spotify in protest of the platform's contract with Rogan. Today, Malone's newsletter, where he shares his anti-vaccine claims and often praises Kennedy, has more than 350,000 subscribers. Kennedy and Malone have long been intertwined. Kennedy wrote the foreword to Lies My Gov't Told Me and wrote an endorsement for PsyWar, alleging that the same techniques that the Malones described shaped public reaction to the assassinations of his father and uncle. Kennedy's 2021 book, The Real Anthony Fauci —which alleges that the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases spread corruption and fraud—is dedicated to Malone, among others. Since Kennedy was appointed as Health and Human Services secretary, many of his allies in the anti-vaccine world have accused him of moderating his views to be more palatable to lawmakers. But among anti-vaccine activists, Malone's appointment to the advisory board was taken as evidence that Kennedy remains on their side. Public-health experts, by contrast, are horrified. 'I think that the scientific and medical community won't trust this committee, and for good reason,' Paul Offit, a pediatrician and former member of the advisory group, told me. He's heard from fellow public-health experts who are considering forming their own committees to weigh the evidence, 'because they won't trust the conclusions of these people.' Sean O'Leary, the American Academy of Pediatrics' liaison to ACIP, told me he was 'deeply concerned' with RFK's decision to entirely remake the committee. 'This maneuver really endangers public health. It endangers children,' he said. He worries that it will lead to disease, suffering, and death among adults and children alike. (Neither Malone nor HHS responded to requests for comment. On X, Malone promised to 'do my best to serve with unbiased objectivity and rigor.') Malone's appointment is perhaps the strongest sign yet of Kennedy's willingness to appoint ideological crusaders into powerful government roles. ACIP's recommendations are nonbinding, but historically, the CDC has almost always hewn to them. The committee's verdicts will help determine which vaccines insurance companies and the federal government pay for, decisions that will inevitably shape countless Americans' immunization habits. Malone's new role requires in-depth, good-faith examinations of scientific evidence. But he has already earned a reputation for rejecting it.