NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on March 28.Leandro Lozada / AFP via Getty Images

Anil Oza is a general assignment reporter at STAT focused on the NIH and health equity. You can reach him on Signal at aniloza.16.

It is perhaps not surprising that the director of the National Institutes of Health would invoke the name of a man revered by scientists as the architect of a policy widely credited with driving the United States’ global supremacy in biomedical research. But Jay Bhattacharya’s claim over the weekend that the Trump administration is pursuing a vision articulated eight decades ago by that scientific leader, Vannevar Bush, has provoked pushback — even outrage — in scientific circles.

Standing before one of the country’s largest annual gatherings  of conservative political activists, Bhattacharya attempted to make the case that the administration’s science policies — particularly its efforts to diminish the research dominance of elite universities and spread federal funding more broadly across the country — are rooted in the ideas Bush proposed at the end of World War II. 

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“I want to tell you a great story about how we can make America healthy again. I’m going to begin with a perspective from 1944 that still challenges us today,” he began his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Saturday in Dallas. “There was a man named Vannevar Bush. He wrote a book called ‘The Endless Frontier’ that warned that the scientific progress in the United States was becoming unevenly distributed. Too much research capacity, he argued, was concentrated in a small number of institutions.”

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