White House Dismisses Entire National Science Board, Sparking Concerns Over Science Policy Direction
April 25, 2026
The National Science Board’s role is to guide NSF’s future direction and funding priorities, and its removal could disrupt high-level science strategy.
Its independence and staggered terms are deliberate design features rooted in a 1945 vision of insulated governance that shields science policy from short-term politics.
Zoe Lofgren, the ranking Democrat on the House Science Committee, condemns the move as harmful to science and warns the president may replace the board with loyalists.
NSF funding has been historically low with notable delays in disbursing dollars, affecting research advances like MRI tech, mobile devices, and startups such as Duolingo.
The NSB, created by the National Science Foundation Act of 1950, consists of distinguished scientists and public figures whose six-year terms are staggered to insulate policy from political cycles.
Verge reports that multiple sources indicate the Trump administration dismissed the entire NSB, which advises NSF to the president and Congress.
As of May 5, 2026, the NSB is slated to meet but has no agenda and, more critically, no board in place, prompting questions about whether the 1950 structure still functions.
Scholars have debated modernizing the NSB, but many argue against broader political control in favor of maintaining independence and defined terms.
The dismissal fits into a broader narrative of perceived attacks on the NSF by the administration, with implications for science policy and oversight.
On April 24, 2026, the White House fired all 24 NSB members, eliminating the body that helps shape NSF’s strategic direction and oversees about $9 billion in federal research funding annually.
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