Skip to content
Apply
Stories

MAHA has reshaped health policy. Now it’s working on environmental rules

People in this story

Associated Press, February 2026

On New Year’s Eve, Lee Zeldin did something out of character for an Environmental Protection Agency leader who has been hacking away at regulations intended to protect Americans’ air and water. He announced new restrictions on five chemicals commonly used in building materials, plastic products and adhesives, and he cheered it as a “MAHA win.” It was one of many signs of a fragile collaboration that’s been building between a Republican administration that’s traditionally supported big business and a Make America Healthy Again movement that argues corporate environmental harms are putting people’s health in danger.

The unlikely pairing grew out of the coalition’s success influencing public health policy with the help of its biggest champion, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. As health secretary, he has pared back vaccine recommendations and shifted the government’s position on topics like seed oilsfluoride and Tylenol. Building on that momentum, the movement now sees a glimmer of hope in the EPA’s promise to release a “MAHA agenda” in the coming months.

Continue reading at the Associated Press.

More Stories

‘Who Will Revere the Black Woman?’ Remembering Nancy, Cerina and So Many More

04.24.2026
Pope Leo XIV arrives to celebrate the Holy mass at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception of Mongomo, Equatorial Guinea, Wednesday, April 22, 2026, on the tenth day of his 11-day pastoral visit to Africa. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Do the papacy and politics mix?

04.24.2026

The Solution Belongs to Us: A Conversation with Professor Moira Zellner

Research Stories