Fed Update: COGR News Digest

Council on Governmental Relations (COGR)

7/23/25Inside Higher Ed

  Federal Grant Cuts Don’t Spare Red States, New Report Shows

The Center for American Progress says the Trump administration has targeted for termination more than 4,000 grants across over 600 institutions. Adjusting for statewide enrollment, South Dakota is hit harder than Massachusetts

7/23/25Politico

  State Department launches new investigation into Harvard

The State Department will investigate Harvard University’s eligibility to sponsor international students and researchers, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced Wednesday, the latest attempt by the Trump administration to pressure the Ivy League university

7/23/25NPR

  U.S. probes foreign links to agriculture research to protect food supply

The  Agriculture Department  is applying more scrutiny to research done by its employees alongside noncitizens.

7/22/25Inside Higher Ed

  NIH to Limit AI Use, Cap P.I. Grant Applications at 6 per Year

The National Institutes of Health says its new policy comes after the agency “recently observed instances of Principal Investigators submitting large numbers of applications.”

7/22/25Bloomberg Law, Opinion

  NIH Budget Cuts Are a Setback for American Science: Editorial

White House budgets, generally speaking, aren’t serious governing documents. Even so, they’re a declaration of national priorities — and by that measure, the latest blueprint is deeply troubling. What sort of administration aspires to shrink its budget for scientific discovery by 40%?

7/22/25Science

  In ‘blow to the environment,’ EPA begins to dismantle its research office

In a sweeping reduction of the U.S. government’s research capabilities, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)  announced  last week it will begin to dissolve its Office of Research and Development (ORD) and lay off staff. The toll is expected to include hundreds of scientists and their research on environmental hazards

7/22/25Science

  Employees’ protests against Trump science policies spread to NSF

The  three-page NSF petition  states that “our oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution … compels us to call attention to actions that jeopardize NSF’s mission, independence, and laws that protect the federal workforce from politicization and abuse.” It was sent to Representative Zoe Lofgren of California, the top Democrat on the science committee of the U.S. House of Representatives, who has repeatedly accused Trump of waging an assault on science

7/22/25Nature

  Do academics publish less after getting tenured? Depends on your field

Academics’  research-publication patterns  shift fundamentally after they attain  tenure, a coveted status that provides job security  in the United States, according to an analysis 1  of more than 12,000 researchers across 15 disciplines

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