In late April 2026, a rumor spread online that U.S. President Donald Trump had dismissed every member of the National Science Board. Founded in 1950, the board oversees the National Science Foundation and advises Congress and the president on scientific matters.
For example, a Facebook post shared on April 26 claimed Trump fired all 24 members of the board (archived):
The claim also circulated on X and Reddit, and Snopes readers emailed us to confirm its veracity.
Given the above, we've rated the claim as true.
Former board members confirm dismissals
Snopes reached out to all
When we asked Roger Beachy, professor emeritus of biology at Washington University in St Louis, if he could confirm that he and 21 other board members had been dismissed via email on April 24, he said, "Yes, the emails came to us just after 4:00 p.m. EDT on Friday the 24th."
Willie May, professor of Chemistry at Morgan State University and former President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, also confirmed that he and his colleagues had been dismissed, but declined to comment further.
In an emailed response to the same question, Keivan Stassun, professor of Astrophysics and Computer Science at Vanderbilt University, confirmed the dismissal message stated no reason for the move. He
White House explains reason for dismissal
In an email to Snopes on April 27, a White House official confirmed Trump dismissed the board and said the decision followed a 2021 U.S. Supreme Court case that raised "constitutional questions" about its authority:
The Supreme Court's reasoning in U.S. v. Arthrex in 2021 raised constitutional questions about whether non-Senate confirmed appointees can exercise the authorities that Congress gave the National Science Board.
It was unclear how U.S. v. Arthrex applied to the NSB. The president appoints the members of the NSB and, like administrative patent judges, the Senate does not confirm them. However, unlike administrative patent judges, the NSB only advises Congress and the president and holds no real decision-making power. Its members don't decide on policy themselves. In a follow-up email, we asked the White House to explain how the U.S. v. Arthrex ruling justifies changing how the NSB has functioned for 76 years
"We look forward to working with the Hill to update the statute and ensure the NSB can perform its duties as Congress intended," the White House official added. "The National Science Foundation's work continues uninterrupted."
For further reading, Snopes previously investigated a claim that Trump ordered scientists not to publish research without approval.
