• Economy
  • Editor’s Pick
Money Rise Today – Investing and Stock News
  • Investing
  • Stock
Editor's Pick

What replaced USAID? Inside the Trump administration’s global health overhaul

by February 4, 2026
written by February 4, 2026

For months after the Trump administration dismantled the U.S. Agency for International Development, critics warned that America’s global health programs were being gutted. What drew far less attention was what replaced it. 

In December 2025, the White House quietly rolled out the America First Global Health Strategy, shifting control of U.S. global health aid from USAID to the State Department and fundamentally rewriting how billions of dollars in foreign assistance are distributed.

The transition has been shaped in part by a small group of former officials now advising the White House from the private sector, including former USAID administrator Mark Green and former lawmakers Ted Yoho and Chris Stewart. They are not running the programs, but they have been involved in pressing for clearer accountability standards, tighter performance metrics and congressional guardrails they say are necessary if the new framework is going to last beyond a single administration.

At the core of the strategy is a sharp break from how U.S. health aid traditionally has worked. The America First Global Health Strategy replaces USAID’s grant-heavy, nongovernmental organization-driven model with country-by-country agreements that tie funding to performance benchmarks and push foreign governments to assume greater responsibility over time. The framework promises tighter control over spending, but many of its enforcement details — including how benchmarks will be set and applied — are still being developed.

So far, the strategy has been implemented through a limited number of bilateral health agreements negotiated country by country. In December 2025, the United States signed a five-year health cooperation agreement with Kenya, covering areas such as HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, with U.S. funding tied to continued performance and increased co-investment by the Kenyan government. Similar memorandums of understanding have since been signed or are under negotiation with countries including Nigeria and Cameroon, according to State Department disclosures.

Congress has long appropriated global health funding at a high level, giving USAID broad discretion over how programs were designed and implemented — a structure that left lawmakers with oversight but little involvement in individual funding decisions. Yoho said that discretion allowed the agency to drift over time.

‘It lost the purity of purpose of what it was designed to do,’ Yoho said. ‘They lost their mark and they became political and ideological.’

The new strategy, by contrast, explicitly frames global health assistance around U.S. national security, bilateral relationships and economic interests. But because it has not been codified into law, those priorities could be redefined or reversed by a future administration.

‘If it’s not codified in the law, how aid is supposed to be done, it’ll go away if we flip to a Democratic administration,’ Yoho said.

Former Rep. Chris Stewart, who served on both the House Intelligence Committee and the Appropriations subcommittee responsible for funding foreign assistance, said that even lawmakers who approved global health spending often had limited visibility into how programs operated once money left Washington.

‘Even as an appropriator — someone who supposedly wrote the checks — we didn’t have the oversight that we needed,’ Stewart said.

Under the America First Global Health Strategy, Stewart said oversight is intended to begin earlier, with clearer priorities and closer alignment between U.S. objectives and what recipient countries actually want. During his travels, Stewart said foreign leaders repeatedly told him they were less interested in open-ended aid than in building their own capacity.

‘We don’t really just want aid,’ Stewart said. ‘We want trade. We want to build our own capacity.’

Stewart said the shift toward government-to-government agreements is intended to make spending more traceable and more directly attributable to the United States, while still requiring firm controls to prevent waste or abuse.

‘That doesn’t mean every government we work with is perfect,’ he said, ‘but it does make it easier to know where the money is actually going.’

Supporters of the new framework point to longstanding disease-specific programs as evidence that tighter oversight does not require abandoning global health investments altogether. Yoho, Stewart and Green all cited PEPFAR, the U.S. government’s HIV/AIDS initiative, as a model of bipartisan foreign assistance that has saved lives while strengthening U.S. relationships abroad. 

Stewart and Green also pointed to malaria prevention efforts, while both emphasized child health and nutrition as areas Congress should continue to prioritize.

Yoho also cited the use of ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) to treat severe childhood malnutrition, describing it as a low-cost intervention with clear humanitarian impact and broad bipartisan support.

Former USAID administrator Green said the strategy is built around accelerating what he calls the ‘journey to self-reliance,’ moving countries from long-term aid recipients to partners — and eventually, in some cases, donors themselves.

‘We want every country to go from being an aid recipient, to a partner, to — in a perfect world — a fellow donor and investor,’ Green said.

Under the new framework, Green said global health assistance is negotiated nation by nation through bilateral agreements tailored to local conditions and reciprocal obligations. 

‘This isn’t a handout,’ he said. ‘This instead is a joint venture between the U.S. and the government in another country,’ designed to build local capacity and shift responsibility over time.

The strategy also places greater emphasis on leveraging private-sector tools alongside government funding. 

Green pointed to partnerships with U.S. companies such as Zipline, which uses drone technology to deliver blood and medical supplies in hard-to-reach areas, as an illustration of how the framework seeks to pair public health goals with American innovation.

Still, Green acknowledged that much of the system remains a work in progress. While the agreements are intended to tie funding to performance and burden-sharing, he said many of the specific benchmarks and enforcement mechanisms are still being finalized.

‘A wedding is easy and a marriage is hard,’ Green said, describing the challenge of translating broad agreements into measurable, enforceable outcomes.

For supporters of the new strategy, the tighter focus on accountability is also meant to address longstanding skepticism on the right about foreign aid itself. Yoho said he once shared that skepticism.

‘I was one of those that wanted to get rid of foreign aid,’ he said. ‘Then I got up there and realized how ignorant I was about good, effective foreign aid.’

He said the argument becomes easier when programs are clearly defined and measurable.

‘If representatives have credible information and can go back to their constituents and explain why we should support something — because it makes America safer, stronger, and more prosperous — the majority of people will support it,’ Yoho said.

Whether the America First Global Health Strategy ultimately delivers on its promises — or exposes new risks — may depend less on its design than on how much authority Congress chooses to formalize, and how rigorously the administration enforces the accountability standards it has laid out.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

previous post
Leaked documents expose Khamenei’s secret deadly blueprint for crushing Iran protests
next post
Federal judge grills DOJ lawyers over censure of Democratic senator

related articles

Al Green returns to House chamber for Trump...

February 25, 2026

Russian ‘dark fleet’ tanker believed to be delivering...

February 25, 2026

Schumer, Dems again block DHS funding, force State...

February 25, 2026

Mexico says Jalisco security situation ‘stabilized,’ flights resuming...

February 25, 2026

Pentagon gives AI firm ultimatum: lift military limits...

February 25, 2026

Iran’s shadowy chemical weapons program draws scrutiny as...

February 24, 2026

US, France move to steady ties after Paris...

February 24, 2026

Rebel GOP Senate candidate enters lion’s den for...

February 24, 2026

Rubio, Ratcliffe to deliver classified Iran briefing to...

February 24, 2026

Rubio, Ratcliffe to deliver classified Iran briefing to...

February 24, 2026
Enter Your Information Below To Receive Free Trading Ideas, Latest News, And Articles.


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Latest News

  • Morning Glory: The worst debate in the history of presidential debates

    September 12, 2024
  • DAVID MARCUS: Why nobody wants to cut the national debt despite everyone saying they should

    May 28, 2025
  • War-torn regions have keen interest in US elections

    October 30, 2024
  • Expert reveals massive levels of waste DOGE can slash from entitlements, pet projects: ‘A lot of fat’

    February 14, 2025
  • Saks files for bankruptcy as luxury market struggles

    January 15, 2026

Popular Posts

  • 1

    District judges’ orders blocking Trump agenda face hearing in top Senate committee

    April 2, 2025
  • 2

    Secret Service admits leaning on ‘state and local partners’ after claim it ignored Trump team’s past requests

    July 21, 2024
  • 3

    Five more House Democrats call on Biden to drop out, third US senator

    July 19, 2024
  • 4

    Forex Profit Calculator: Maximize Your Trading Potential

    July 10, 2024
  • 5

    Elon and Vivek should tackle US funding for this boondoogle organization and score a multimillion dollar win

    December 4, 2024

Categories

  • Economy (829)
  • Editor's Pick (8,070)
  • Investing (1,049)
  • Stock (979)

Latest Posts

  • IG: Hegseth broke Pentagon rules using Signal to share strike details, though no classified info was released

    December 4, 2025
  • Dem crime policies crippling cities even in Red states as crackdown intensifies, White House warns

    September 9, 2025
  • US emissions reductions off track for 2030 targets under Paris accord

    July 24, 2024

Recent Posts

  • Lasers, space radars, missile interceptors: Defense leaders lay out vision for Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ project

    March 23, 2025
  • House Dem moves to force vote on releasing Gaetz ethics report

    December 3, 2024
  • Trump assassination attempt being investigated by FBI as potential domestic terrorism act

    July 15, 2024

Editor’s Pick

  • Top political handicapper reveals what Dems’ chances are at winning back the Senate in 2026

    February 11, 2025
  • Witkoff and Kushner scheduled to meet Putin in Moscow

    January 21, 2026
  • SCOOP: Sen Ron Johnson readies subpoenas for FBI, DOJ in Butler shooting probe

    July 10, 2025
  • About us
  • Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Disclaimer: moneyrisetoday.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively “The Company”) do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

Copyright © 2025 moneyrisetoday.com | All Rights Reserved

Money Rise Today – Investing and Stock News
  • Economy
  • Editor’s Pick
Money Rise Today – Investing and Stock News
  • Investing
  • Stock