


How DOGE is driving America’s public-health guardians mad
Internal emails and interviews portray a workforce seized by fear and confusion
ON A NARROW road on the main campus of the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lies Building 21, the crescent-shaped headquarters of America’s premier public-health agency. In a room lined with television screens researchers monitor the measles outbreak that killed a second American in the southern plains last week and the bird-flu epidemic now ravaging flocks in every state. The agency’s leadership occupies the 12th floor. Military-grade security ensures that only authorised visitors and the CDC’s local workforce of roughly 5,000 civil servants have access.
Explore more

Checks and Balance newsletter: Depending on America is a vulnerability
The more you trust America, the less you can trust it

DOGE shutters the government’s in-house tech consultancy
Political loyalty appears to be more important than tech skills

Three principles are at play in the cases concerning DOGE
Though by the time the courts are done, Elon may be too
The women vying to make conservatism fashionable online
Intellectual dominance is not enough for the MAGA movement. Aesthetic dominance must follow
Donald Trump deploys new tactics to manage the media
Free-speech groups worry how far he will go
Democrats are struggling to respond to Trump
First, the party must work out what it stands for