Media Says Trump's World Is 'Fracturing,' You Believe Them?

Biden Team Issues Trump Warning

Liberal Politician Slams Trump’s “Make America Healthy Again” Plan, Defends Bloated Bureaucracy

In a dramatic post on social media platform X, former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra launched a heated political broadside against President Trump’s reform-driven health agenda—warning of a so-called “collapse” in public health.

Becerra, now running for governor in deep-blue California, claimed Trump’s “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) initiative is gutting government health agencies and silencing bureaucrats. But supporters of the plan say it’s about time Washington stopped treating the American people like children and started respecting their rights.

“I gave this administration a chance,” Becerra wrote. “But after the MAHA report fiasco, vaccine rollbacks, and silencing of experts—I’m done holding back.”

What he calls a ‘fiasco,’ many Americans are calling freedom.

The MAHA agenda focuses on parental rights, medical choice, and ending reckless spending by health agencies that pushed lockdowns and mandates during COVID. But Becerra is fighting to preserve the old system—one that prioritized unelected “experts” over everyday Americans.

Citing two tragic measles deaths, Becerra accused the administration of ignoring science. He went on to claim that the MAHA report cited “nonexistent studies”—a claim critics say is just political noise.

“They’re muzzling researchers. Laying off experts. Erasing science,” Becerra warned.

But is cutting bloated staffing really a threat—or just long-overdue accountability?

Trump’s Plan: Less Bureaucracy, More Liberty

Under Trump, HHS has trimmed unnecessary programs and redirected funds to support real outcomes—not inflated government salaries or politicized research. Staff reductions are being praised by many fiscal conservatives as necessary house-cleaning after decades of waste.

Becerra tried to stir fear about these cuts, asking, “Who’s going to inspect nursing homes? Who’s going to test imported toys for lead?” But critics argue that’s just scare tactics from a career bureaucrat unwilling to let go of federal control.

Museum Cuts? Or Budget Priorities That Make Sense?

Becerra also attacked Trump for removing funding from a planned National Museum of the American Latino, accusing him of “erasing history.” But conservatives argue that in an era of skyrocketing debt and real national threats, cutting unnecessary cultural projects is just common sense.

“You don’t honor history by erasing it,” Becerra insisted.

But President Trump’s supporters say: You protect history by securing the future.

As the 2026 election cycle heats up, Becerra’s attacks are being seen by many as a desperate attempt to revive support among progressive voters. Meanwhile, across the country, more Americans are standing with President Trump and his vision for health freedom, fiscal responsibility, and government accountability.