Trump Signs Order Halting Federal Funding for Gain-of-Function Research
- On May 5, 2025, federal funding for gain-of-function virus research in the U.S. And select foreign nations, including China and Iran, was suspended following a directive issued by the White House.
- The order responds to concerns about pandemic risks from gain-of-function studies, heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic and debates over research oversight in countries with limited safeguards.
- The order includes measures to pause U.S. Funding until stricter policies are developed, blocks support for labs in nations deemed adversaries, and aims to improve transparency and regulate dangerous experiments.
- NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya called it “a historic day,” while Rep. James Comer and Sen. Rand Paul warned about accidental leaks causing pandemics and praised the funding ban as necessary.
- The executive order marks a shift toward tightening oversight of viral research but maintains uncertainty about non-federal studies and ongoing scientific debates about gain-of-function’s role in future outbreak preparedness.
155 Articles
155 Articles
Trump's Gain-of-Function Order Prompts Questions
(MedPage Today) -- In the wake of President Donald Trump's executive order on gain-of-function research, questions linger on exactly how the order will be implemented and about its potential impacts on the study of infectious diseases, experts...
Trump Signs EO Restricting ‘Gain of Function’ Research That Enhances Pathogens
Meanwhile, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appeared on The Ingraham Angle, and alleged that Dr. Anthony Fauci played a central role in moving dangerous "gain-of-function" virus research offshore to places like Wuhan. The post Trump Signs EO Restricting ‘Gain of Function’ Research That Enhances Pathogens first appeared on Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.
US limits controversial pandemic pathogen research
The NewsUS President Donald Trump moved to limit controversial “gain-of-function” research that could make pathogens more dangerous. These experiments involve taking viruses or bacteria and modifying them, sometimes to make them more transmissible or deadly, for example. The idea is to protect against future pandemics, but critics say it risks creating lethal pathogens which could then leak from a lab. Trump’s executive order includes stiffer pe…


Genetic Study Retraces the Origins of Coronaviruses in Bats
In the early 2000s, a coronavirus infecting bats jumped into raccoon dogs and other wild mammals in southwestern China. Some of those animals were sold in markets, where the coronavirus jumped again, into humans. The result was the SARS pandemic,…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 68% of the sources lean Right
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage