Trump to nominate Susan Monarez for CDC director, sources say


President Trump has decided to pick Dr. Susan Monarez to be the new nominee to head the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sources familiar with the decision tell CBS News, making permanent the acting role she has served at the public health agency in recent months.

Monarez would be named in place of Dr. David Weldon, a former Florida congressman whose nomination was withdrawn by the White House earlier this month over concerns that he didn’t have the votes to clear the Senate confirmation process. 

An official for the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the CDC, confirmed Monarez would be nominated. White House spokespeople didn’t immediately comment. 

Dr. Susan Monarez

Dr. Susan Monarez 

CDC


Monarez has apparently beat out others who had been seen as contenders for the role, including former obstetrician-gynecologist and Texas congressman Michael Burgess. Weldon had also floated Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo for the role, calling for him to be at the top of Mr. Trump’s list to replace him as the nominee.

If confirmed, Monarez would be the first head of the CDC to be voted on by senators, under a change passed by Congress in 2022. Previous directors of the agency were able to take the reins soon after they were picked by the president, without undergoing the confirmation process.

Monarez, who was previously deputy director of the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, has been serving as the CDC’s acting head since January

She has been viewed as an unconventional pick for the role because previous interim directors have come from within the CDC’s career ranks. 

According to one federal health official, White House officials have said they are trying to “get it right” with their new pick. Another federal official said that Monarez had gotten along well with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr, since taking on the role.

Monarez and her aides at the agency were in Washington, D.C., last week for meetings, one federal health official said. 

Nominees to lead the National Institutes of Health, Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services are expected to be confirmed soon, after hearings in recent weeks.

Monarez is likely to face questions over the role she’s played in controversial decisions at the agency in recent months, including undermining the independence of the CDC’s flagship medical research publication, abruptly delaying a meeting of the outside vaccine advisers and plans to research whether vaccines cause autism — long after its scientists had debunked the claims.

A range of health threats are now facing the CDC, including a rise in measles cases driven by a record outbreak among undervaccinated communities in Texas and neighboring states. 

Like other nominees, Monarez will face questions over whether she agrees with condemnation by health experts of Kennedy’s responses to the outbreak, like remarks downplaying the virus and inflating the risks posed by the measles vaccine. Kennedy has also faced criticism over his comments about how to handle other viruses, like the growing bird flu outbreak.

Monarez has also been involved in decisions over steep cuts to the agency’s workforce expected in the coming days, which some managers expect could result in cuts of up to 30% of the CDC’s staff.



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