The United States will leave the World Health Organization, President Donald Trump said on Monday, saying the global health agency had mishandled the COVID-19 pandemic and other international health crises.
Questions remain and reactions from world leaders are coming in after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to remove the United States as a member state of the World Health Organization. We look at the impacts.
President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the World Health Organization via executive order Monday evening to the shock of some.
President Donald Trump announced Monday he is withdrawing the US from the World Health Organization, a significant move on his first day back in the White House cutting ties with the United Nations’ public health agency and drawing criticism from public health experts.
As one of the first actions of his second term, Trump signed an executive order detailing how the WHO withdrawal process might begin.
As he signed an executive order, President Donald Trump said that the World Health Organization had "ripped us off."
The Geneva-based WHO plays a pivotal role in battling global health threats, focusing on infectious diseases as well as humanitarian crises and chronic
Newly-inaugurated President Donald Trump signed an executive order calling for the U.S. to withdraw from the World Health Organization (WHO). In 2020, Trump started the ball rolling toward extricating the U.S. from the United Nations agency, but President Joe Biden reversed course after taking office in 2021.
After his second inauguration, President Donald Trump signed a host of executive orders, some with important implications for science
Health experts and stakeholders in Nigeria have warned that the United States’ withdrawal from the World Health Organisation (WHO)
President Donald Trump has taken the first steps toward enacting his sweeping agenda with a series of executive actions that are expected to kickstart his promised transformation of the federal government.