23% of the AAP’s revenue comes from grants and pledges [1], and their $100mm in investments could cover the shortfall for up to three years if all $28.5mm of that is HHS. A crisis, for sure. But not an urgent one. The AAP can fight.
To that end:
1) Does the AAP have a case that RFK Jr. acted unconstitutionally?
2) Were these “grants…previously awarded” in a binding nature? Or does the government sign grants with a get-out-of-jail-free clause?
3) Is Senator John Barasso, a pediatrician, a dues-paying member of the AAP?
My recollection (apologies, I'm not able to turn up a citation on this) is that the AAP has not really shied away from gripping ideological third rails with both hands; they've taken very liberal-leaning positions on abortion rights, gun violence, trans healthcare, etc. (Of course, depending on how you look at things, such policy positions might appear either partisan or nonpartisan.) I would be surprised if Sen. Barasso were a member.
To that end:
1) Does the AAP have a case that RFK Jr. acted unconstitutionally?
2) Were these “grants…previously awarded” in a binding nature? Or does the government sign grants with a get-out-of-jail-free clause?
3) Is Senator John Barasso, a pediatrician, a dues-paying member of the AAP?
[1] https://downloads.aap.org/AAP/PDF/AAP%20Financial%20Statemen...