
Attorney General Aaron Ford Sues Trump Administration Over Illegal Funding Cuts and Delays for Medical and Public Health Research
Carson City, NV — Today, Attorney General Aaron Ford joined a coalition of 16 attorneys general in suing the Trump administration in the U.S. District Court for Massachusetts over its unlawful attempt to disrupt grant funding issued by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The lawsuit challenges the administration’s unreasonable and intentional delays in reviewing NIH grant applications, as well as its termination of hundreds of already-issued grants.
"The Trump administration’s repeated attacks on public health funding have had significant impacts on Nevada’s researchers and caused uncertainty among our state’s scientific community,” said AG Ford. “These cuts and delays are illegal and will damage scientists’ ability to begin vital public health research or, in some cases, conclude research which has already begun — these cuts have already stopped around $2.4 million in grant funding from going to UNLV researchers. I am confident in our ability to win in court and protect our scientific community’s efforts to protect the public.”
Typically, NIH grant applications must undergo two layers of review: review by a “study section” of subject-matter experts who assess the scientific merit of the proposal and review by an advisory council that considers funding availability and agency priorities. Since January, the administration has cancelled upcoming meetings for both of these review bodies and has delayed the scheduling of future meetings. Further, NIH has indefinitely withheld issuing final decisions on applications that have already received approval from the relevant study section and advisory council. Currently, the plaintiff states are awaiting decisions on billions of dollars in requested research funding.
The complaint also alleges that NIH has recently terminated large swaths of already-issued grants for projects that are currently underway based on the projects’ perceived connection to “DEI,” “transgender issues,” “vaccine hesitancy,” or another topic disfavored by the current administration. In boilerplate letters issued to the grants’ recipients, NIH claims that each cancelled project “no longer effectuates agency priorities.” With these shoddy explanations, the complaint alleges, the Trump administration has clawed back millions of dollars that have already been awarded to address important public health needs.
As a result of the administration’s delays and terminations, the states allege that their public research institutions have experienced significant harm. For example, three NIH grants for UNLV were terminated, resulting in researchers losing out on around $2.4 million in grant funding.
The coalition argues that by postponing meetings; delaying the review of pending applications; failing to issue final recommendations; and terminating issued grants, NIH is failing to meet its statutory obligations and violating applicable regulations. Further, the coalition argues that the administration does not have the authority to unilaterally decline spending congressionally appropriated funds.
The coalition is asking the court to compel the administration to promptly review and issue decisions on delayed grant applications and prohibit them from terminating already-awarded grants.
On February 10, AG Ford joined a coalition of 22 attorneys general in filing a lawsuit against the administration for its attempts to unilaterally cut “indirect cost” reimbursements for NIH grants at nearly every research institution in the country. On March 5, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction against the Administration, preventing it from cutting the funding as the case proceeds.
Joining AG Ford in filing today’s lawsuit, which was led by Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown and Washington Attorney General Nick Brown, were the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.
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