Trump Fired the National Science Board. Here's Why That Matters
5 hours ago
- #Governance
- #Institutional Integrity
- #Science Policy
- On April 24, 2026, the White House dismissed all 24 members of the National Science Board (NSB).
- The NSB, established by the National Science Foundation Act of 1950, jointly sets strategic direction, approves budgets, and authorizes programs for NSF, which distributes about $9 billion annually.
- Board members are nominated based on distinguished service in science, engineering, education, and public affairs, with staggered six-year terms to insulate research priorities from political cycles.
- American scientific leadership relies on institutional structures like the NSB, designed post-WWII for independence from political pressure, inspired by Vannevar Bush's 'Science, the Endless Frontier'.
- Past debates about the NSB's role focused on modernization while preserving its staggered terms and statutory independence, unlike other federal agencies subject to direct political control.
- The removal of all board members raises concerns about the erosion of shared bipartisan commitment to institutional safeguards for science.
- With the NSB's next meeting scheduled for May 5 but no board members or agenda, the incident highlights broader questions about the future of independent science governance in the U.S.