From CDC:
As of June 25, 2026, 2,134 confirmed* measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026. Among these, 2,122 measles cases were reported by 41 jurisdictions: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York City, New York State, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. A total of 12 measles cases were reported among international visitors to the United States.
There have been 30 new outbreaks** reported in 2026, and 93% of confirmed cases (1,982 of 2,134) are outbreak-associated (629 from outbreaks starting in 2026 and 1,353 from outbreaks that started in 2025).
For the full year of 2025, a total of 2,288 confirmed* measles cases were reported in the United States.
[E]xchanges over the flu vaccine campaign are in a cache of internal C.D.C. emails obtained last week by The New York Times, and published online this week. The messages provide a detailed look at a period of transition in which the leaders of the nation’s public health agency frequently found themselves buffeted and dismayed by the agenda imposed by Mr. Kennedy and the new Trump administration....
The emails begin in January, before Mr. Kennedy was confirmed, and end in mid-August, about a week before the White House fired Dr. Monarez as C.D.C. director at the secretary’s request, just 29 days after her Senate confirmation. While Mr. Kennedy’s fraught relationship with the health agency is well known, the messages, coupled with interviews, shed light on how C.D.C. employees scrambled to meet his demands — often on matters regarding vaccines and autism — as the administration gutted the agency’s ranks.
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C.D.C. political leaders went to great lengths to install Mr. Kennedy’s allies in key positions, even if they did not have crucial professional qualifications for the job, the documents show. The agency tried to use Title 42, a federal code that permits scientific experts to be hired without going through the regular civil service process, to put a businessman who was a longtime activist on behalf of parents of children with autism in charge of its National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities.
The activist, Mark Blaxill, a Harvard Business School graduate and founder of the group SafeMinds, has written books and medical journal articles on autism; one was retracted in 2023. C.D.C. human resources officials concluded that he lacked the scientific qualifications to be considered a “distinguished consultant” under the law. He now works at the agency in another capacity, and does not run the birth defects center.
The emails confirm, as The Times has previously reported, that Mr. Kennedy was deeply involved in efforts to gain control over the Vaccine Safety Datalink, or VSD, a database of millions of confidential medical records that, he believes, has the potential to prove a link between vaccines and autism, a theory that has been debunked in numerous studies. His own top aides were under pressure, too.
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While the secretary steered clear of most career scientists, at least in his early days in office, he was giving direct instructions to one of them, William Thompson, who has challenged a 2004 C.D.C. study that concluded the measles vaccine was not linked to autism, and works under government whistle-blower protections.
Dr. Thompson was working to compile data sources for future autism studies; he called it a “high priority for Secretary Kennedy.” A note from the secretary appears just once in the email collection. He weighed in with a one-sentence message during a conversation with Dr. Thompson about a two-decade old data set used by a former C.D.C. researcher, Thomas Verstraeten.
“Bill. I’m assuming this is the verstratten original data,” Mr. Kennedy wrote.