President Donald Trump said on Saturday he may consider rejoining the World Health Organization, days after ordering a U.S. exit from the global health agency over what he described as a mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic and other international health crises.
Public health experts say the United States’ departure could cripple the WHO’s operations or leave an opening for China to assume greater control over the agency.
Public health experts say U.S. withdrawal from the W.H.O. would undermine the nation’s standing as a global health leader and make it harder to fight the next pandemic.
U.S. President Donald Trump has used one of the flurry of executive actions that he issued on his first day back in the White House to begin the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization for the second time in less than five years.
ordered that the United States take steps to withdraw from the World Health Organization. Washington’s more than 70-year membership in the WHO nearly ended in Trump’s first term in office ...
The United States will leave the World Health Organization on Jan. 22, 2026, the United Nations said on Thursday, after being formally notified of the decision by President Donald Trump, who has accused the agency of mishandling the pandemic and other international health crises.
The executive order cites the organization ... WHO would make the world far less healthy and safe,” Lawrence Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborating Center on Global Health Law at Georgetown ...
President Trump on Monday signed an executive order to withdraw the U.S. from the World Health Organization. “Oooh that’s a big one,” Mr. Trump said at the Oval Office as he was handed the ...
The directive to the CDC to halt communications with the World Health Organization was imposed to comply with President Trump's executive order.
As anticipation builds for the March for Life on Friday, Priests for Life, an anti-abortion organization, will host a protest outside D.C.'s Planned Parenthood.
Donald Trump staged a dramatic and triumphant comeback to the prestigious and powerful office of the White House on, Martin Luther King Day, as the 47th President of the United States.
A memo from the White House Office of Management and Budget reportedly ordered a pause of federal grants, loans and other financial-assistance programs.