In yet another under-the-radar but significant victory for taxpayers and transparency, the President Donald Trump administration has quietly terminated federal contracts with one of the world’s largest academic publishing conglomerates.
The funding cuts for Springer Nature come following mounting evidence of political bias, scientific censorship, and misuse of federal tax dollars.
Springer is accused of helping former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Dr. Anthony Fauci and ex-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Dr. Francis Collins to cover up evidence that COVID-19 leaked from a Chinese lab.
The administration canceled one active contract and allowed three others to lapse, ending taxpayer funding for the German-based publishing company.
The company controls prestigious science journals but has increasingly come under fire for operating more like a political advocacy group than a scientific institution.
While corporate media barely acknowledged the move, conservative watchdogs are applauding the decision as a long-overdue rejection of the kind of institutional rot that flourished during the pandemic and under prior administrations.
Springer Nature has become infamous for pushing politically charged narratives, downplaying the COVID-19 lab leak theory, and censoring research to appease authoritarian regimes like China.
According to Retraction Watch, Springer was forced to issue 2,923 retractions in 2024 alone, making it one of the most error-prone publishers in the world.
Many of these retractions, critics argue, stem from ideological groupthink and a broken peer-review system overwhelmed by activism.
Fox News media reporter Brian Flood noted in June that Springer “has also been accused of significantly downplaying the Covid lab-leak theory and censoring content to appease the Chinese government.”
One of the most notorious examples was the now-discredited 2020 article in Nature Medicine titled “The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2”, which sought to declare the lab-leak hypothesis “implausible” just weeks after the virus emerged.
The paper played a pivotal role in shutting down discussion of the lab-origin theory.
However, as the tide has turned, the lab-leak theory is now widely considered the most likely scenario, even by mainstream outlets.
A House Oversight Committee investigation in 2023 found that then-NIH leaders Fauci and Collins tracked the paper’s progress through the review process and pushed for its publication to silence dissent.
Dr. Collins even emailed Fauci, lamenting that the article hadn’t fully killed the lab-leak theory and asked if “there was anything more they could do.”
The committee’s conclusion was damning: “This is the anatomy of a cover-up.”
Springer’s problems don’t end with Covid.
In 2017, the company admitted to censoring hundreds of articles to conform to Chinese government demands.
And more recently, Springer retracted a peer-reviewed article on gender dysphoria after activist pressure, marking the first retraction ever for the study’s lead author, Michael Bailey.
Bailey is an experienced academic with no prior history of such action.
Critics say this pattern of suppressing politically inconvenient science represents a full-blown crisis in credibility.
And now, the Trump administration is holding them accountable.
Springer is also notorious for its sky-high publishing fees, charging researchers hundreds of millions in so-called “article processing charges.”
One study found that Springer had raked in $589.7 million in just three years, with profit margins estimated between 30% and 40%, higher than many major corporations.
So why was U.S. taxpayer money ever propping up this bloated foreign publisher in the first place?
That’s a question the Trump administration is answering with bold action.
The Trump administration has now cut around $20 million in taxpayer funds that were being funneled to Springer.
By cutting Springer’s funding and evaluating billions more in unnecessary contracts, President Trump is sending a clear message: the days of American taxpayers underwriting woke, censorious institutions are over.
In a powerful show of commitment to transparency, NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya announced on July 1 a new policy ensuring that federally funded research will now be available to the public immediately upon publication.
“The American people should have immediate free access to the science that we so generously fund through the @NIH. Starting today, we do,” Bhattacharya wrote.
In prior Republican administrations, critics say this kind of waste and ideological entrenchment would have quietly continued.
But under President Trump, the federal government is being recalibrated, slashing woke funding and restoring accountability.
Americans are no longer footing the bill for Springer’s censorship and bias.
As one source told Axios, this is just the beginning.
President Trump gets to say what no one else could: We don’t fund them anymore.
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