When a White House can abruptly hollow out a federal medical research hub by firing senior scientists and leadership, we normalize governance by purge rather than by evidenceâand that precedent ultimately shrinks our own access to competent, stable public institutions. On these facts alone, the conduct is not clearly criminal: agency staffing and budget decisions are often lawful exercises of executive authority, even when destructive. The deeper breach is institutionalâusing federal personnel and funding as a political lever without transparent criteria, insulating the decision from accountable oversight and inviting future retaliatory dismantling of any program tied to political opponents or inconvenient public needs.