29 Apr 2026
44m

How Trump's EPA head has transformed the agency — and sided with polluters

Podcast cover

Fresh Air

Lee Zeldin’s tenure as head of the Environmental Protection Agency marks a fundamental shift in the agency’s mission, moving away from public health protection toward a deregulatory agenda that prioritizes fossil fuel interests. The dismantling of the Office of Research and Development, a scientific arm previously independent from political influence, effectively removes a critical layer of environmental oversight. Furthermore, the rescission of the endangerment finding—a cornerstone of climate policy based on the 2007 Supreme Court decision *Massachusetts v. EPA*—seeks to prevent future administrations from using the Clean Air Act to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Elizabeth Kolbert highlights how these actions, coupled with the systemic removal of experts, create a "lock-in" effect for fossil fuel infrastructure that will have lasting, irreversible consequences for climate change mitigation and public health.

Outlines

Sign in to continue reading, translating and more.

Open full episode in Podwise