Putting politics above scientific truth
Index on Censorship | Dana Willbanks, CSLDF | October 7, 2024
Since the 2016 election, the United States has seen a rise in the number and severity of attacks on scientists, particularly within the government. This anti-science movement has had the effect of silencing critical voices from the scientific community as its members face harassment, abuse, and personal and professional threats from bad actors hoping to slow or prevent scientific progress. Funding cuts, political interference, censoring or altering research findings, and other tactics have all been used to sow distrust in and ultimately suppress science. In turn, this has deteriorated public trust in science and has had a profoundly chilling effect on scientists’ ability to conduct their vital research and exercise their right to free speech.
In early 2018, the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University and the Climate Science Legal Defense Fund (CSLDF) created the Silencing Science Tracker. This database built upon the two organisations’ existing partnership and overlapping missions of addressing climate change through advocacy and education. The Sabin Center also launched a similar database in response to the Trump administration’s efforts to diminish the federal government’s climate mitigation efforts, and the Silencing Science Tracker was specifically designed to systematically document the administration’s staggering number of widespread attacks on science.
Following the 2020 election, President Biden promised to keep science at the forefront of his administration. Data from the tracker, however, shows the disheartening reality. While the Biden administration has undertaken markedly fewer anti-science actions, it has been slow to undo earlier damage—damage that, in some cases, it continues to perpetuate. Moreover, anti-science efforts continue at state and local levels.
As of July 2024, the tracker has documented 531 cases of censorship, information suppression, misrepresentation of scientific facts, and other policy or administrative anti-science actions in the United States. The tracker includes any action by a government entity in the United States that restricts scientific research, education, discussion, or the publication or use of scientific findings.
Government censorship, the category with the most recorded violations—167 and counting—includes subverting scientific information by making it difficult or impossible to find, often by changing official websites or publications. Under the Trump administration, for example, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) was ordered to remove references to “climate change” from official documents, webpages, and the agency’s Climate Hubs website.
Sometimes, government censorship goes beyond modifying public materials to suppressing scientists’ free speech, preventing them from speaking about matters integral to public health and safety. In 2017, staff in the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) unit of the USDA, whose mission is to support agricultural producers’ conservation efforts, was told to use other terms in place of “climate change.” That same year, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) staff were warned that speaking publicly about their work without undergoing multiple levels of review could result in disciplinary action. And in September 2020, the Trump administration pressured the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to edit or delay the release of the weekly COVID-19 “Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reports” to align with the administration’s messaging concerning the pandemic and its use of unverified and dangerous so-called cures like hydroxychloroquine to treat it.
Instances of government censorship have also been documented at the state level. In January 2021, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo told reporters at one of his daily COVID-19 briefings that he did not “really trust the experts.” Soon after, it was reported that his administration excluded public health experts from pandemic response planning and vaccine rollout efforts and that many state health officials found out about major pandemic policy changes during news conferences.
The second most populated category in the tracker concerns the bias and misrepresentation of scientific findings, such as cherry-picking data to support a political purpose, disregarding findings when crafting public policy, or only disclosing the findings that support a certain conclusion. Despite overwhelming scientific evidence and consensus to the contrary, Trump’s Secretary of Energy and former President Trump himself questioned the human causes of climate change, stating that “scientists say a lot of things” and “I don’t think science knows, actually.”
This disregard for scientific reality is evident throughout the tracker. For example, in January 2020, Trump and his top advisors dismissed scientists’ and biodefense experts’ warnings about the risks of COVID-19. Trump told his Secretary of Health and Human Services to “stop panicking” before downplaying the situation to reporters by asserting that it was “going to be just fine.” As over a million American families know firsthand, this disregard for science has real and devastating consequences.
These are just a few of the many egregious examples of attacks on science that have been documented. Other examples include the misrepresentation of medical science as it relates to abortion, such as the Texas Department of State Health Services suggesting that abortion causes breast cancer; several state legislatures passing laws that force doctors to tell their patients that medication abortions can be reversed; budget and funding cuts at federal agencies, to research studies, and to programs such as the EPA’s Children’s Health Research Program; the termination of advisory committees and disbanding of scientific panels; and much more.
The sustained attack on scientists and the chipping away of public trust in science have had serious impacts on public health, environmental protection, and climate change mitigation efforts, both at home and abroad. While the United States was once considered a world leader in science and innovation, the continued prioritization of politics over truth has damaged that standing, perhaps irreparably so.
Heartbreaking firsthand accounts reveal the deep personal harm caused by the anti-science movement. People whose homes have been destroyed by extreme weather events, who have experienced medical emergencies that leave lasting damage, or who have lost loved ones to COVID-19 have suffered the consequences of a government prioritizing political gain over the well-being of its people. When sitting members of Congress publicly declare that masks and vaccines do not slow the spread of COVID-19, people listen – with devastating results.
While these shorter-term impacts on scientific research and public policy are well documented, the long-term impacts will continue to reverberate for years to come, many of which are currently unknown.
With the looming prospect of the return of another anti-science administration, we are once again highlighting this tool to remind us all of the ongoing fight against misinformation. We know that this tool has an impact; the Silencing Science Tracker has been referenced in Congressional hearings and reports and in letters by sitting Senators and House Committee members. Along with other work we do in support of stronger federal scientific integrity policies, the tracker helps bring attention and, therefore, positive changes to anti-science measures that might otherwise go unnoticed.
Shining a light on the outrageous and dangerous attacks on science by government entities is just one way that we are collectively fighting back. Other databases have been created to document and publicize efforts to sideline or interfere with scientific research, uphold scientific integrity, and protect researchers’ freedom of speech. Supporting these initiatives, advocating for science-friendly policies, and raising public awareness are crucial steps we can all take.
Scientists and others who have witnessed or experienced these attacks firsthand have bravely come forward to share their stories. These firsthand accounts bring home the personal and professional repercussions that too many in the scientific community face when simply trying to perform and publish their research.
Unfortunately, the anti-science movement and its attendant consequences for the world seem to be growing. We are at a critical juncture: the planet may have warmed past the point of no return, extreme weather events are intensifying, and the U.S. faces a crucial election this November. How voters cast their ballots will have far-reaching implications for scientific integrity in the United States and for the entire world.
Access to accurate information is fundamental to a healthy, well-functioning society. Scientists must be able to conduct critical research on the issues that touch every aspect of our lives, from climate change to public health to food safety. They must also be free to share their findings with the public, free from interference, censorship, or intimidation. It is imperative that we not allow further destruction to the access of real and vital information.
As Michael Gerrard, Founder and Faculty Director of the Sabin Center, said at the launch of the tracker, “When the government ignores science, it’s like a truck driver who wears a blindfold and drives based on what is whispered into his ear — dangerous and intolerable.” It is critical that we all call out efforts to silence science, do our part to protect scientific freedom and integrity, and remove the blindfold of ignorance and apathy.