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02:38 - Source: CNN
Washington CNN  — 

The Biden administration is creating a task force to review the federal government’s scientific policies to ensure they are free from inappropriate political influence, as several top health officials under former President Donald Trump publicly admit they faced political pressure while doing their jobs amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy said in a letter to agencies on Monday that it will form an interagency task force to review federal government policies and make sure they “prevent improper political interference” from affecting research or data. The letter also says the task force aims to prevent “the suppression or distortion of scientific or technological findings.”

The letter says that President Joe Biden prioritizes supporting scientists and researchers as they do their work.

“OSTP’s Scientific Integrity Task Force will be taking a whole-of-government, forward-looking review of science across federal agencies, in part by examining practices that were antithetical to that mission over the last four years – including Trump-era policies that eschewed scientific integrity in favor of politics,” said Julia Krieger, a spokesperson for the White House science office.

An administration official said the review is less about Trump’s actions to interfere in scientific decisions and more about protecting science in the federal government going forward.

The creation of the task force was first reported by The New York Times, which said the forthcoming probe represents “the first step in what White House officials described as a sweeping effort to rebuild a demoralized federal work force.”

The investigation will also stand as an early example of the Biden administration’s commitment to science and government accountability, and it comes after several former Trump administration officials have said they felt political pressure while doing their jobs during the pandemic.

Among those officials is Robert Redfield, the former director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who told CNN’s Sanjay Gupta that he felt pressured during his time on the job to change the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, which is the agency’s published roundup of important research and recommendations.

“The challenges I had were with the office of the Secretary,” Redfield said. “I think some of the ones that were the most notable, that I was the most offended by, was the calls that wanted me to pressure and change the MMWR.”

Redfield said that he was asked to change the MMWR “on more than one occasion.”

Alondra Nelson, the deputy director for science and society at the White House science office and Jane Lubchenco, the deputy director for climate and the environment at the White House science office, told the Times that it’s unclear whether the administration would create a new “governmentwide scientific integrity policy” or take specific action at various agencies to prevent future abuses.

During Trump’s four years in office, both he and many of his political appointees were notably hostile toward science, particularly the science around climate change and the coronavirus pandemic.

Among other actions taken over the last four years, the Trump administration made several changes to various Environmental Protection Agency websites. In many cases, climate change language was stripped from them. At the time, the Trump administration’s EPA said language was being updated to “reflect the approach of new leadership.” The changes were later reversed by Biden’s EPA.

Trump was also criticized for appointing a number of climate skeptics to key posts, including David Legates, a longtime climate change skeptic who was tapped to help run the federal agency charged with producing “much of the climate research funded” by the government, according to The Washington Post.

And earlier this year, a review of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Covid-19 guidance found that some of the agency’s guidance during the Trump administration was not grounded in science or free from undue influence, according to a statement from a CDC spokesperson.

CNN’s John Bonifield, Jacqueline Howard, Caroline Kelly and Liz Stark contributed to this report.