The Morning: Targeting a vaccine

Plus, new tariffs, Ukraine peace talks and "Hamilton" at 10.
The Morning
August 7, 2025

Good morning. Just after midnight, President Trump's new tariffs on more than 90 countries took effect.

  • Rates: They start at 15 percent for countries including Bolivia and Nigeria. Brazil is subject to one of the highest tariffs, 50 percent. (See a map of the rate for every country.)
  • Negotiations: Some U.S. trading partners — including the European Union, Japan and South Korea — had brokered deals for lower rates. The president of Switzerland, which has the highest tariff of any developed nation, left Washington yesterday without an agreement.
  • What's next: Trump said he would double tariffs on India, to 50 percent, as punishment for the country's continued purchase of Russian oil. He has also threatened to impose a 100 percent tariff on foreign semiconductors.

We have more news below. But first: The most clicked article in The Morning yesterday was about the government halting support for mRNA vaccines. Below, we take a closer look at that decision.

A shot that's about to be administered in someone's arm.
Administering the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine in 2021.  John Locher/Associated Press

Shot in the dark

Author Headshot

By Adam B. Kushner

I'm the editor of this newsletter.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health secretary, isn't just a vaccine skeptic. He especially dislikes one type of vaccine: those that use mRNA technology, such as the first Covid shots. He has canceled nearly $500 million to make mRNA immunizations and a bird-flu vaccine that Moderna was developing.

This is a relatively new technology, and it's worth remembering the moment the shots debuted for widespread use in late 2020. Three hundred thousand Americans had died from Covid. (The number eventually exceeded a million, the most of any country.) Most schools were still closed. White-collar workers were still mostly remote. Americans were in a mental health crisis. When I got my jab, I hadn't eaten in a restaurant for a year. The vaccines ended all that.

Kennedy says they're no good, and he's halting government support for them. For today's newsletter, I asked Apoorva Mandavilli, who covers vaccines for The Times, to explain what's happening.

What is an mRNA vaccine?

Some vaccines use a weakened version of a bacterium or virus to provoke an immune response and train your body's defenses. Others use a piece of the virus that the body can easily recognize as foreign. MRNA has the instructions for making only one small part of a virus. It directs the body's cells to make that fragment, which then sets off an immune response.

What is Kennedy's argument about mRNA?

Kennedy echoes many people's discomfort with the speed at which the vaccines were developed. But mRNA vaccines had been studied for more than 20 years before Covid struck. His criticisms also go further than most. He has said the vaccines are ineffective because they don't prevent infection. He has also said they're dangerous, at one point referring to them as the "deadliest" vaccines ever made.

And what does the evidence show?

Like all vaccines, the Covid mRNA shots have some side effects. Anecdotally, thousands of people reported problems. But extensive studies in the U.S. and elsewhere found only a few serious ones. For example, the vaccines can cause heart problems in a small fraction of young men, and one study said there were seven severe cases of shingles for every million shots administered. This is comparable to the safety record of most other vaccines. It's not surprising that we've heard more about Covid vaccines, because they were given to billions of people worldwide.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gesturing with his hand.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.  Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

Kennedy prefers "whole-cell" vaccines to mRNA shots. What does that mean?

Whole-cell vaccines are based on a crude technology developed more than 100 years ago. Those vaccines use the entire pathogen, so they may expose the body to hundreds of antigens — the part of the bacterium or virus that provokes an immune response — at once.

Not surprisingly, they also cause very strong reactions, including seizures and fevers in young children. Over the decades, we have developed much cleaner, sleeker vaccines that contain only the few antigens they need. There is a trade-off: The newer vaccines sometimes are less protective than the cruder versions.

If more people getting shots have ugly side effects, as they would from those whole-cell vaccines, it may give even more fuel to the antivax movement.

It may. In the case of Covid vaccines, it may not even be mRNA tech causing the side effects. The coronavirus is a powerful adversary, and any vaccine designed to counter it may shock the immune system. There is no perfectly safe vaccine or drug.

One thing I don't get: President Trump built Operation Warp Speed, the government effort to develop these Covid vaccines. And he spent years urging people to get them. What's your best understanding of why mRNA is now out of favor with his administration?

The Covid mandates turned many against the vaccines as employers and schools required people to get inoculated. Kennedy brought his own political constituency, which includes many people opposed to vaccines, and Trump has given him a lot of autonomy to make decisions about public health.

CAN HE DO THAT?

An aerial view of downtown Washington, D.C. The U.S. Capitol is in the background.
Washington, D.C.  Daniel Slim/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Once again, Trump has threatened to take over Washington, D.C. This time, it came after a violent assault on a former DOGE staff member. But the president has said repeatedly that the federal government needs to take over the city, which he has called "a filthy and crime-ridden embarrassment to our nation." Campbell Robertson, who covers the Mid-Atlantic region for The Times, explains what's possible.

The law. A federal takeover would be difficult. Before 1973, Congress and presidential appointees ran the city. The Home Rule Act enacted that year let D.C. elect its mayor and City Council. Reasserting full federal control would require Congress to repeal the law. While some Republicans like the idea, the party's lack of a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate makes it unlikely.

Some control. Still, there are ways the federal government can intervene. In 2023, Congress blocked a crime bill passed by the D.C. Council. It regularly attaches "riders" to federal spending bills that restrict what the district can do — such as a rule in 2023 barring legal marijuana sales.

A narrow takeover. Under the Home Rule Act, the federal government could take control of the D.C. police for up to 30 days under "special conditions of an emergency nature." But while Trump mused about doing so during the protests of 2020, he hasn't mentioned it in this term.

THE LATEST NEWS

Trade

Hundreds of large shipping containers at a marine shipping terminal.
The Port of Baltimore.  Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times
  • Trump's new tariffs will bring about his longtime goal of overturning a global trade system. Economists are skeptical that they will work in the way he intends.
  • Despite a trade deal that cut U.S. tariffs on Japanese cars to 15 percent, Japan's auto giants like Toyota and Nissan are braced for big hits to their profits.
  • China's exports surged in July as companies raced to ship goods to Southeast Asia and other regions, often to be re-exported to the U.S., before Trump could raise tariffs.

Trump Administration

  • Trump intends to meet in person with Vladimir Putin as soon as next week and plans to follow up shortly after with a meeting of Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky and himself.
  • The Veterans Affairs Department has begun terminating union contracts, part of the administration's plan to end union protections for federal workers.
  • The president has privately discussed whether to intervene in New York's mayoral race to try to stop Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee.
  • The administration's travel ban has complicated planning for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles: Athletes are exempt from the restrictions, but fans are not.
  • Trump said Vice President JD Vance was "most likely" to succeed him as the leader of the MAGA movement.

Redistricting

  • Republicans are wielding political and legal threats to pressure Texas Democrats, who left the state to protest a redrawn political map, to end their walkout.
  • Trump's pressure campaign on Republican-led states to redraw congressional maps is testing his power over governors and state legislators, Tyler Pager writes.

Business

Tim Cook in the Oval Office as President Trump looks on.
Tim Cook in the Oval Office.  Doug Mills/The New York Times
  • Trump and Tim Cook, the chief executive of Apple, announced at the White House that the company would invest $100 billion in manufacturing in the U.S.
  • Consumers are flocking to Aldi, the low-cost supermarket. It plans to open 200 stores across the U.S. this year — more than any other grocer.
  • Trump said the Bureau of Labor Statistics "rigged" its jobs report with a downward revision. But the agency regularly revises jobs data.

Other Big Stories

  • The protest group Palestine Action does not promote violence against people, but after it damaged military property, the British government banned it as a terrorist organization, Lizzie Dearden writes.
  • A sergeant is accused of shooting five soldiers at Fort Stewart-Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia. The suspect's father said he had complained of racism at the base.
  • A medication could have reduced the opioid epidemic's toll. But political red tape and a quest for profit prevented many patients from getting it.

OPINIONS

A peace deal between Ukraine and Russia that does not return Ukrainian children or hold Russian torturers accountable will be a temporary one, Alice Edwards writes.

NASA's partnerships with private companies make the American space program cheaper and faster than China's. Cutting funding to NASA may threaten its advantage, Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona, a former astronaut, writes.

Here are columns by Jamelle Bouie on Trump and Justice John Roberts and Carlos Lozada on summer reading.

Catch up on the biggest news, and wind down to end your day.

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MORNING READS

Barry James is seated at a counter in a dark room with lots of shelves. The only light is coming from one desk lamp.
The paleontologist Barry James in his fossil preparation room.  Caroline Gutman for The New York Times

Dino whisperer: When his wife died, a paleontologist poured his grief into the reconstruction of a triceratops skeleton that they had started together.

No more training wheels: Experts say the balance bike method is a more intuitive and empowering way for kids to learn to ride.

Tripped up: After an emergency landing on a tiny island, airline passengers said, Delta left them to fend for themselves.

Trending: Season 2 of Netflix's "Wednesday" dropped yesterday, and people online were looking up information about it. Haven't watched the show yet? Here's what to know.

A media pioneer: As an openly gay producer, Joseph Lovett was a rarity in the television news world of the 1970s and '80s. He pursued segments aimed at destigmatizing gay life and drawing attention to the AIDS crisis when others were overlooking it. Lovett died at 80.

SPORTS

Victoria Mboko, in a blue tennis outfit and matching visor, clenches her fist in celebration.
Victoria Mboko Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images

Tennis: Naomi Osaka advanced to the Canadian Open final, her first WTA 1000 final appearance since 2022. Her opponent: Victoria Mboko, an up-and-coming star in the sport.

M.L.B.: Jen Pawol is set to become the first female umpire in Major League Baseball this weekend. Read more about her.

Red Sox: The team agreed to an eight-year, $130 million contract with the young star Roman Anthony, who has played fewer than 50 games for the franchise. It's still a bet Boston had to make, our columnist writes.

ARTS AND IDEAS

In a scene from
Lin-Manuel Miranda, center, as Alexander Hamilton.  Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

Ten years ago this week, "Hamilton" opened on Broadway. It has since sold more than four million tickets and earned more than $1 billion — and that's not counting all the money it made from tours, international productions and the 2020 movie. Times journalists looked at the show's impact on race-conscious casting, theater ticket prices, fan outreach and more.

More on culture

  • Feel as if your wardrobe is stuck in the past? Our fashion critic has advice.
  • Late night hosts had even more jokes about Trump's visit to the White House roof. "He can't answer your questions if he can't hear them," Seth Meyers said.

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

Bread in a pan topped with thin strips of zucchini.
Julia Gartland for The New York Times

Bake a delicious zucchini bread with olive oil, lemon zest and Greek yogurt.

Cut these jeans into the perfect jorts.

Build an emergency kit. Here's how.

GAMES

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was enjambment.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections, Sports Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

The Morning Newsletter Logo

Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Evan Gorelick, Desiree Ibekwe, Brent Lewis, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

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