15 states sue Trump administration for putting kids "at risk" with vaccine policy changes

Los Angeles, California - 15 Democratic-run states announced Tuesday they are suing President Donald Trump's administration over its reduction in the number of recommended pediatric vaccines, which they criticize as contrary to science.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (l.) is named as a defendant in the new lawsuit.  © JIM WATSON / AFP

The reform, announced in January by the US Department of Health and Human Services, led by long-time vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr., means the country is no longer recommending that every child receive immunizations against several diseases, including rotavirus, influenza, and Covid-19.

Instead, the seven vaccines in question are being recommended only for those children at particular risk, a move that upends years of scientifically backed recommendations that reduced disease with routine shots.

"Secretary RFK Jr. and his CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) are flouting decades of scientific research, ignoring credible medical experts, and threatening to strain state resources and make America's children sicker," California Attorney General Rob Bonta, leading the lawsuit with his Arizona counterpart, said at a press conference.

Donald Trump Trump seeks advice: Should Vance or Rubio succeed him in 2028?

Kennedy is named as a defendant, along with the CDC and the Department of Health and Human Services.

The other vaccines stripped of their universally recommended status are for hepatitis A, meningococcal disease, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and the highly infectious hepatitis B virus.

Ad

Trump administration's vaccine policy changes spark alarm among medical experts

Vaccine skepticism has been on the rise in the US amid Trump's second term.  © Sean Rayford / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP

Washington's reorientation of the childhood vaccination schedule has raised concerns within the medical community.

The Trump administration justified its actions last month by saying it was putting the US vaccination policies more in line with those of other countries, citing Denmark as an example.

Some health experts point to Denmark as being a small, homogeneous country with a low prevalence of disease and a centralized health care system that guarantees universal access to care.

Kamala Harris Secret DNC report reveals the big issue that cost Kamala Harris the 2024 election to Trump

Such conditions do not apply to the US, where the largely privatized health care system is less comprehensive than in northern Europe and has left millions of Americans uninsured.

"Copying Denmark's vaccine schedule without copying Denmark's health care system doesn't give families more options – it just leaves kids unprotected from serious diseases," Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said at the press conference.

Vaccine skepticism has risen in the US since Trump returned to the presidency 13 months ago.

Vaccination rates have been declining since the Covid pandemic, raising fears of a resurgence in deadly and contagious diseases like measles.

The issue has become deeply political, with California Governor Gavin Newsom, a fierce Trump critic and potential 2028 presidential candidate, weighing in.

"California is going back to court because the Trump administration is violating federal law and pushing a reckless, unscientific childhood vaccine schedule that puts kids' lives at risk," Newsom said in a statement.

The 58-year-old Democrat said undermining confidence in vaccines will lead to lower vaccination rates and more cases of infectious disease.

Other states filing the lawsuit include Colorado, Michigan, New Jersey and Wisconsin.

More on Donald Trump: