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‘We just need someone who’s not crazy’: Inside the White House decision to nominate Erica Schwartz as CDC director

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating

By Adam Cancryn, Sarah Owermohle, CNN

(CNN) — Over the course of 12 months, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has seen a traumatic shooting, abrupt leadership changes and a shattering of its image as a globally respected public health agency.

So by the time the Trump administration started looking for a new director, there was one requirement that topped the search criteria.

“We just need someone who’s not crazy,” a White House official told CNN.

It took months, but Trump officials finally  think  they’ve found the right candidate.

The choice of Erica Schwartz, a former deputy surgeon general and retired US Coast Guard officer, to run the CDC is aimed at bringing stability to the agency after a year of near-constant upheaval that has decimated morale and deeply shaken Americans’ faith in the administration’s health agenda, senior health officials and others familiar with the matter said.

Schwartz is a notable departure from prior contenders considered by the administration, who have toed the “Make America Healthy Again” line. She has a lengthy record of guiding vaccination programs and crises responses for the government – a stark contrast to Trump’s first CDC pick, whose nomination was withdrawn, in part, because it became clear his vaccine skepticism would prevent him from getting the job.

Her candidacy has already won praise on Capitol Hill, generating hope within the administration that she’ll win quick confirmation.

And as the White House intensifies its focus on the midterm elections, the move is the latest sign of how significantly Trump aides have sought to rein in a Health and Human Services Department led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that once enjoyed wide latitude to pursue divisive efforts to overhaul vaccines and other core health policies.

But the move has already shaken the MAHA faithful, while still leaving some mainstream public health experts unconvinced.

“She’s a good and well-qualified nominee, and  would be in any administration. However, the issue is not her qualifications — it’s the environment that she’s being asked to work in,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and spokesperson for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. “If this is supposed to be some kind of pivot away from what’s been going on for the last year, it will all be window dressing if RFK Jr. is still in place.”

Meanwhile, Toby Rogers, a prominent vaccine critic, declared on X that Schwartz’s appointment would be “a slap in the face to the medical freedom base that gave Trump the presidency in 2016 and 2024.”

“The White House isn’t even trying to win the midterms at this point,” he added.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

A notable shift

The White House has been eager to get the health department away from unflattering headlines in the run-up to midterm elections that could cost Republicans control of Congress — and stall President Donald Trump’s agenda.

Vaccines had been a particular sticking point. Trump withdrew his first nominee, former congressman  Dr. Dave Weldon, when it became clear his vaccine views would stall a vote.

The CDC director who was confirmed, Dr. Susan Monarez — a scientist and longtime public health official — immediately clashed with Kennedy over vaccine policies and his efforts to oust some senior CDC officials. She was removed less than a month into the job.

After Monarez’s high-profile departure last August, some Trump officials questioned whether it was even worth attempting  to find another nominee to run the agency.

Kennedy installed his then-deputy secretary, Jim O’Neill, as interim head, and sought to concentrate much of the decision-making among the department’s political leadership in Washington.

Yet senior Whi

Siguen los cambios en Venezuela: Delcy Rodríguez nombró a Carlos Alvarado como ministro de Salud, un cargo que ya ocupó

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

Por Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

La presidenta encargada de Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, nombró este viernes a Carlos Alvarado como nuevo ministro de Salud, un cargo que el médico ya había ocupado entre 2018 y 2022, durante el Gobierno del derrocado presidente Nicolás Maduro.

Rodríguez anunció el nombramiento en su canal de Telegram y sus redes sociales, donde resaltó el trabajo de Alvarado para enfrentar la pandemia de covid-19 que en 2020 se extendió por América Latina.

Desde entonces hasta el 29 de marzo de este año, en Venezuela se han acumulado más de 553.000 casos de covid-19, de acuerdo con los registros de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS).

Alvarado es un médico egresado de la Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV). Hasta antes de su nuevo nombramiento como ministro, era presidente del Instituto Venezolano de los Seguros Sociales (IVSS), que este viernes lo felicitó por su designación.

“Confiamos en que su liderazgo será fundamental para consolidar el Sistema Público Nacional de Salud, impulsando los principios de Salud Colectiva y garantizando el Buen Vivir de toda la población”, dijo la institución en su cuenta de Facebook.

Alvarado no es el primer ministro de Salud que nombra Rodríguez desde que asumió como presidenta encargada, luego de la captura de Maduro en un operativo militar de Estados Unidos.

El 19 de enero, Rodríguez designó como ministra a Nuramy Gutiérrez, quien ahora será rectora de la Universidad de las Ciencias de la Salud Hugo Chávez Frías, según anunció el propio Gobierno este viernes.

Los cambios en el Ministerio de Salud se suman a las decenas de movimientos que Rodríguez ha hecho desde enero en el Gobierno y la cúpula militar.

Algunos analistas han dicho a CNN que con esto Rodríguez busca consolidar su poder. También destacan que muchas figuras del chavismo solamente están cambiando de posición, como en el caso de Vladimir Padrino, quien salió del Ministerio de Defensa y esta semana fue nombrado ministro de Agricultura.

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