Trump names CDC director pick, fills key agency roles

Summary

Trump nominated Dr. Erica Schwartz for CDC director and announced several other senior agency appointments.

Why this matters

The appointments could shape leadership and policy at the CDC after months of turnover. The changes also come as federal vaccine policy remains under scrutiny and subject to court action.

President Donald Trump named Dr. Erica Schwartz as his nominee to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and announced several other senior appointments at the agency.

In a Truth Social post Thursday, Trump said Schwartz, a former deputy surgeon general during his first term, would be his next pick for CDC director. Schwartz attended Brown University for college and medical school and served as a physician in the U.S. military. Trump called her a “STAR!”

Trump also named Sean Slovenski as CDC deputy director and chief operating officer, Dr. Jennifer Shuford as CDC deputy director and chief medical officer, and Dr. Sara Brenner as senior counselor for public health to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

At a House Appropriations Committee hearing Thursday, Kennedy told lawmakers the new CDC team would revolutionize the agency and get it “back on track.”

Trump’s first CDC pick was former Florida congressman Dr. David Weldon, but his Senate confirmation hearing in March 2025 was canceled. Weldon said he had been told there were not enough senators willing to vote for him.

Trump next chose Susan Monarez, who had been serving as acting CDC director. She was confirmed by the Senate, but was removed less than a month later after the administration said she was not “aligned with their agenda.” Her removal prompted several senior scientific leaders at the CDC to resign in protest.

National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya has overseen the agency for the past few weeks.

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