What happened next at USAID
A textbook case of how not to cut wasteful government spending
ON JANUARY 28th the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, issued an “emergency humanitarian waiver” to exempt life-saving aid from Donald Trump’s freeze on all foreign assistance. Two weeks later, in Malawi, a country of 20m in southern Africa that is the world’s seventh-poorest by GDP per person, most local charities have stopped working and about 5,000 people—many of them health workers—have lost their jobs, says Mazisayko Matemba of the Health and Rights Education Programme, an NGO. “We expect more people to get infections and start dying.”
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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Long knives”
United States
February 15th 2025- Donald Trump wants states and cities to do as they are told
- Donald Trump and the art of the quid pro quo
- Inside the world’s most famous aeroplane boneyard
- What happened next at USAID
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From the February 15th 2025 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the editionDonald Trump’s Washington reaches a new partisan peak
His address to Congress showed that Republicans will follow their leader anywhere, and that Democrats don’t have one
Andrew Cuomo plots a comeback in New York City
The disgraced former governor announces a run for mayor of the Big Apple
Trump’s armed forces won’t look like Biden’s
America is set to spend more—and differently
Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump’s savvy dealmaker
The novice diplomat embodies the president’s transactional worldview
America has never had state media like it does today
Donald Trump and Elon Musk are revolutionising presidential communication
America’s Gen Z has got religion
Because of them, a long decline in the number of Christians has levelled off