Save NASA Science Action Hub

SAVE NASA SCIENCE

THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS TO SLASH SPACE SCIENCE BY 46% in 2027.
HELP STOP THIS THREAT, AGAIN.

1.

Write Your Member of Congress

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2.

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3.

Donate to our advocacy program

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NASA science is facing a 46% cut in the president's budget request for 2027.

If implemented, upwards of 53 science missions would be terminated, nearly half of NASA's entire science fleet. Thousands of jobs would be lost, billions of dollars of taxpayer investments would be wasted, and more than a dozen international partnerships would be broken.

This is an extinction-level event for space science.

Last year, we mobilized and stopped draconian cuts to space science. We need your help to do it again.

Latest Updates

June 5, 2026 · 1:01 p.m. PT

The Planetary Society releases statement, resources in opposition to OMB rule changes

Jack Kiraly head shot

By Jack Kiraly
Director of Government Relations

In response to OMB's proposed changes that would undermine the foundation of the American scientific enterprise, The Planetary Society released the following statement:

"The Planetary Society strongly opposes the OMB’s proposed changes to federal grant-making rules. If implemented, the changes would isolate, suppress, and throttle American scientific activity by imposing burdensome new bureaucratic requirements and curtailing free speech, free association, and free inquiry. They would also enable partisan political control over grant awards and restrict the dissemination of scientific results.

"NASA's success depends on world-leading scientific capabilities. The nation’s scientific workforce, working closely with their international collaborators, has enabled historic discoveries such as past water on Mars, the accelerating Cosmos, the existence of exoplanets, and more.

"Science is the backbone of the American economy, generating a 3-to-1 return on the taxpayer’s investment. Our nation has always relied on merit-based, independent scientific review to select the best ideas and new technologies for development. The proposed rule changes would all but end the use of scientific merit in the selection of grants and programs across the government.

"The United States cannot be first in space if it is second in science. And the nation cannot lead the world in science if the systems are driven by politics rather than merit. The U.S. would cede the next generation of discoveries in space to other nations — including the potential detection of biosignatures or even life beyond Earth — if these rules are implemented.

"These rules are not final and the public has until July 13th to submit their comments on the proposed changes. We urge everyone who values science and supports the scientific exploration of space to participate in this important process and urge rejection of these reprehensible rule changes."

Also available are the following resources to help advocates write comments opposing these proposed rule changes:

June 1, 2026 · 1:19 p.m. PT

Office of Management & Budget proposes major revision, dismantling of U.S. scientific enterprise

Jack Kiraly head shot

By Jack Kiraly
Director of Government Relations

The White House Office of Management & Budget, the creators of the twice-failed budget proposals to gut NASA's science programs, announced a formal rule change to federal rules for grant-making. These proposed changes must stand public scrutiny for 45 days before being enacted.

Among the many changes proposed are new procedures whereby political appointees are given control over all new grants coming out of the federal government. Those appointees will have the ability to terminate existing and new awards, undermining the merit-based, peer-reviewed selection process that defines legitimate, scientific inquiry. The changes would also ease the ability for agencies to terminate awards "for convenience" and prohibits the use of award funding to enable researchers to present their findings at conferences and in academic journals. This is the most sweeping rewrite of American science standards in more than 75 years. The public can submit comments on these proposed changes until July 13.

An overview of the proposed changes is covered in this article in Ars Technica.

May 29, 2026 · 8:16 a.m. PT

NASA submits reorganization, spending plans to Congress

Jack Kiraly head shot

By Jack Kiraly
Director of Government Relations

According to reporting by POLITICO, NASA submitted a formal notice of its reorganization plans as well as its FY 2026 spending plan. Both are required to be approved by Congress, with the legislature having 30 days to approve or disapprove of the reorganization. The spend plan comes more than 80 days late with the submission 45-day deadline having passed on March 9th. Details about the spending plan are scant, but recent news about new elements of — including the renaming of three existing Commercial Lunar Payload Service missions and announcement of two vendors to provide the Lunar Terrain Vehicles for Artemis astronauts — reveals a focus by Administrator Isaacman on the Moon Base initiative announced two months ago at the Ignition event.

Despite "science" being included in many of the announcements, no new funding for instrument development and science investigations were part of any of the recent announcements, creating a cause for concern.

The destruction of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket last night further complicates the planned acceleration of the Moon Base initiative.

Resources

NASA funding history by science division

FY 2027 NASA Funding Charts

All charts and related data comparing the FY 2027 budget request for NASA and NASA science.

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Talking Points

Stay up to date with the latest information in the campaign to Save NASA Science.

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NASA Science Spending Dashboard

Explore real-time data about spending, contracts, and grants to see the economic impact of NASA science in every state and congressional districts.

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map showing NASA contracts across the US

Original Research and Analysis

We participate in the process of developing space policy by providing original analysis, releasing policy recommendations, and generating useful data for public and academic use.

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Action Center

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Casey Dreier at the Save NASA Science Day of Action