Sentinel & Enterprise

Trump has info agents at CDC

Neither has public health background

- Ey Jason Learen, Mike stobbe and Richard Lardner

NNW YoRk » The Trump White House has installed two political operatives at the nation’s top public health agency to try to control the informatio­n it releases about the coronaviru­s pandemic as the administra­tion seeks to paint a positive outlook, sometimes at odds with the scientific evidence.

The two appointees assigned to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Atlanta headquarte­rs in June have no public health background. They have instead been tasked with keeping an eye on Dr. Robert Redfield, the agency director, as well as scientists, according to a half-dozen CDC and administra­tion officials who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal government affairs.

The appointmen­ts were part of a push to get more “politicals” into the CDC to help control messaging after a handful of leaks were “upsetting the apple cart,” said an administra­tion official.

When the two appointees showed up in Atlanta, their roles were a mystery to senior CDC staff, the people said. They had not even been assigned offices. Eventually one, Nina Witkofsky, became acting chief of staff, an influentia­l role as Redfield’s right hand. The other, her deputy Chester “Trey” Moeller, also began sitting in on scientific meetings, the sources said.

It’s not clear to what extent the two appointees have affected the agency’s work, according to interviews with multiple CDC officials. But congressio­nal investigat­ors are examining that very

question after evidence has mounted of political interferen­ce in CDC scientific publicatio­ns, guidance documents and web postings.

The White House declined to comment. A CDC spokespers­on confirmed that Witkofsky and Moeller were working at the agency reporting to Redfield, but did not comment further.

Moeller said in an email to The AP, “I work for Dr. Redfield who is 100% committed to the science and the thousands of incredibly dedicated employees at the CDC working on behalf of the American people.”

During previous pandemics such as Ebola or SARS, the CDC was the public face of the U.S. response, offering scientific­ally driven advice to doctors and patients alike. The agency played the same role at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, but stumbled in February when a test for the virus sent to states proved to be flawed. Then, in late February, a top CDC infectious disease expert, Dr. Nancy Messonnier, upset the administra­tion by speaking frankly at a news conference about the dangers of the virus when the president was still downplayin­g it.

Within weeks, the agency was pushed offstage as President Donald Trump and other administra­tion officials, during daily news briefings, became the main sources of informatio­n about the U.S. epidemic and the attempts to control it.

Still, CDC persisted in assembling science-based informatio­n that conflicted with the White House narrative. In May, a series of leaked emails and scientific documents obtained by The AP detailed how the White House had buried CDC’s detailed guidelines for communitie­s reopening during a still-surging pandemic. The emails revealed that the administra­tion was vetting CDC’s science through the Office of Management and Budget, rather than relying on its medical experts on the White House coronaviru­s task force. The resulting news stories of the shelving of the documents angered the administra­tion, and sparked renewed efforts to exert control over CDC, according to current and former officials.

On a Monday in June, the new faces arrived at CDC’s Atlanta offices. One was Witkofsky, who according to federal election records had a minor role in Trump’s presidenti­al campaign.

Witkofsky was installed initially as a senior adviser to Redfield. In a few weeks, she would take over as the agency’s acting chief of staff and gradually become the person at CDC headquarte­rs who has the most daily interactio­ns with him, the CDC officials said.

Senior CDC staff found out about the appointmen­ts the week before they happened, according to a CDC official who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal agency affairs. They had no office, and no one knew their role.

“They just showed up on a Monday,” the official said.

Presidenti­al administra­tions appoint CDC directors. And there’s nothing new about a White House seeking a better handle on informatio­n released by the CDC, said Glen Nowak, a University of Georgia professor who ran the agency’s media relations for more than a dozen years. But past administra­tions placed overtly political appointees at HHS in Washington; the Trump administra­tion has taken it to a new level by placing other people in CDC’s Atlanta headquarte­rs, Nowak said.

Before Witkofsky and Moeller, the Trump administra­tion had appointed

others at CDC in Atlanta who were viewed by staff with some suspicion. But none of the predecesso­rs’ roles was so clearly to report internal agency business up to Washington, according to officials who talked to The AP.

And Witkofsky seemed a particular­ly strange fit for the nation’s top public health agency. She studied finance and business administra­tion in college and graduate school, and at one point worked as a publicist and talent booker for Turner Broadcasti­ng’s Cartoon Network. Her political work included being an events director during the George W. Bush 2000 presidenti­al campaign. As a State Department official, she developed an internatio­nal engagement program for U.S. athletes and coaches.

Her lack of familiarit­y with the CDC, and how it worked, quickly became clear in meetings, according to multiple agency officials. At one, Witkofsky expressed surprise that the CDC had a supporting foundation, one agency official recalled.

Though Witkofsky was largely unknown, she had met a few CDC workers months earlier. In March, on behalf of the administra­tion, she had worked communicat­ions when Trump visited a CDC lab. Clad in a red “Keep America Great” baseball cap, Trump had praised the CDC and assured the public “we’re prepared for anything.” Trump asserted that he has a terrific grasp of public health. “Maybe I have a natural ability,” he boasted.

In her new role, Witkofsky communicat­ed regularly with Michael Caputo, chief of communicat­ions for CDC’s parent agency, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, two administra­tion officials said. At the time Caputo’s office was attempting to gain control over the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, or MMWR, a CDC scientific weekly known for publishing authoritat­ive and unvarnishe­d informatio­n about diseasefig­hting efforts, according to multiple accounts. Witkofsky’s deputy, Moeller, who began work on the same day, is a longtime GOP supporter who worked on the BushCheney presidenti­al campaign in 2004. The most recent post on his Facebook page was a “Make America Great Again” Trump campaign banner.

They wanted him to sit in meetings and “listen to scientists,” said a former CDC

official.

Witkofsky was added to CDC’s website when she became acting chief of staff, but Moeller’s name appears nowhere on either the HHS or CDC sites.

An HHS spokespers­on said both Witkofsky and Moeller report to Redfield but refused to comment further on personnel matters.

Some CDC officials noted that a pandemic like this involves many parts of the government, and the political people sent to Atlanta have at times helped speed the flow of informatio­n coming to the agency from Washington.

But there has been a huge downside, public health experts and former CDC staffers say: damage to the once-venerated CDC.

The agency’s guidance for how to reduce viral infections has been largely ignored by the Trump White House, where officials have refused to wear masks and continued to hold large gatherings with few protective measures.

Witkofsky and Moeller are among officials the House Select Subcommitt­ee on the Coronaviru­s Crisis is seeking to interview as part of a probe it launched in midSeptemb­er into allegation­s the Trump administra­tion blocked the CDC from publishing accurate scientific reports during the pandemic.

The subcommitt­ee’s investigat­ors want to know more about Witkofsky and Moeller’s roles in reported attempts by Caputo and administra­tion officials to gain editorial control over the MMWR and other CDC publicatio­ns. The investigat­ors are also interested in whether Witkofsky and Moeller were involved in making changes to CDC COVID-19 guidance for schools, as well as agency informatio­n that has been changed multiple times on how the virus spreads through the air.

Caputo took a leave of absence from HHS after he described government scientists as the “resistance” against Trump in a video posted online. In an HHS podcast, Caputo accused Democrats in the government, along with the news media, of not wanting a vaccine so as to punish the president. After the incidents gained news coverage, one of Caputo’s top advisers, Dr. Paul Alexander, resigned.

The apparent meddling and political pressure from the Trump White House,

and from HHS, have caused even scientific experts to question some CDC decisions. And they have made an already trying job of responding to the worst pandemic in a century even harder, according to multiple CDC officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“I don’t trust the (political appointees) that they’ve dropped into the CDC,” said Dr. Rick Bright, a federal vaccine expert who filed a whistleblo­wer complaint alleging he was reassigned to a lesser job because he resisted political pressure to allow widespread use of hydroxychl­oroquine, a malaria drug pushed by Trump as a COVID-19 treatment. Bright said CDC scientists should be the face of the federal response, as has been the tradition, and the absence of their counsel to the public has contribute­d to confusion.

“That is absolutely frightenin­g,” he said. “(It) leads to the mixed signals to the public. And I think that is increasing the magnitude and duration of this entire pandemic.”

Bright resigned last week from his post at the National Institutes of Health, saying his superiors had ignored a national coronaviru­s testing strategy he’d developed.

All of the added political pressure is contributi­ng to a high burnout rate for CDC scientists working on the coronaviru­s response. One agency official said it “creates distractio­ns from the real threat” of the virus, and extra work.

From March through September, there has been a constantly changing organizati­onal structure and leadership in CDC’s COVID response, according to internal organizati­onal charts obtained by The AP.

In a chart from March, Messonnier was listed as a “Senior Official,” one step below the director, Redfield. But in the following chart, posted weeks after the press conference that angered the White House, her name disappeare­d completely from the top ranks. A new box had appeared on next to Redfield’s name: the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force led by Vice President Mike Pence.

In previous pandemics and outbreaks like Ebola that lasted for months or years, records and interviews show that the CDC’s leadership remained largely stable to create a consistenc­y that staff could rely upon.

 ?? CDC VIA AP ?? This Tuesday image from the U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention website shows part of page for Nina Witkofsky, new acting chief of staff of the agency. Witkofsky was installed initially as a senior advisor to Dr. Robert Redfield, the CDC's director. In a few weeks, she would take over as the agency’s acting chief of staff and gradually become the person at CDC headquarte­rs who has the most daily interactio­ns with him, the CDC officials said.
CDC VIA AP This Tuesday image from the U.S. Centers of Disease Control and Prevention website shows part of page for Nina Witkofsky, new acting chief of staff of the agency. Witkofsky was installed initially as a senior advisor to Dr. Robert Redfield, the CDC's director. In a few weeks, she would take over as the agency’s acting chief of staff and gradually become the person at CDC headquarte­rs who has the most daily interactio­ns with him, the CDC officials said.

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