11 Jul 2025

Measles in the US reaches a 3-decade high

Benjamin Mateus



A sign outside of Seminole Hospital District offering measles testing, Feb. 21, 2025, in Seminole, Texas. [AP Photo/Julio Cortez]

The United States has reached a troubling new milestone, recording the highest number of measles cases in more than three decades. As of July 7, 2025, according to the Johns Hopkins Measles tracker, a total of 1,281 confirmed measles cases have been reported in the United States. This surpasses the 1,274 cases reported in all of 2019, the last recent peak following an outbreak in several orthodox Jewish communities in suburban New York City.

The figure, by all accounts, represents an underestimation of the actual incidence of measles infection. Measles was officially declared eliminated in the US in 2000, and since then the country typically saw an average of about 180 cases, almost all linked to travel to other countries where measles was still encountered.

This alarming resurgence is primarily driven by falling childhood vaccination, particularly in under-vaccinated communities, as seen in a significant outbreak originating in West Texas. The vast majority of those affected, approximately 95 percent of confirmed cases in 2025, have been individuals who were unvaccinated or whose vaccination status was unknown.

The consequences have been severe, with three measles-related deaths reported in the US this year—two children in Texas and one adult in New Mexico, all of whom were unvaccinated—matching the total number of US measles deaths over the previous two-and-a-half decades. Experts warn that if current trends persist, the US is at risk of losing its measles elimination status.

While West Texas has been identified as a major epicenter of the current measles surge, accounting for 69 percent of reported cases in an outbreak spanning Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma, the prevalence of measles is alarmingly widespread across the United States.

As of July 5, 2025, at least 38 states have reported at least one case of measles this year, with a total of 27 identified outbreaks (defined as three or more related cases). Cases have appeared in various states, including Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.

This widespread distribution shows that while some outbreaks stem from imported cases, local transmission is largely responsible for most reported cases. For instance, a recent spike in Colorado cases was linked to an infectious traveler on a plane, leading to further community spread.

The broad age range of affected individuals also suggests that this outbreak has been developing over years due to persistent gaps in measles vaccine coverage, predominantly the result of an insidious anti-vaccination and disinformation campaign that has taken a disturbing hold on the national and international theater.

The concerning resurgence of measles is directly linked to a decline in childhood vaccination rates across the US. A recent study published in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) analyzed county-level vaccination data and found that childhood MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccination rates have been declining in much of the US since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Specifically, among 2,066 counties in 33 states, 78 percent reported a decline in vaccination rates. The county-level mean vaccination rate decreased from nearly 94 percent before the pandemic to about 91 percent after the pandemic. This puts the national average well below the 95 percent threshold public health experts consider necessary for herd immunity against measles, a target the US has missed for four consecutive years.

Notable drops include Hawaii, which saw its vaccination rate plummet from around 95 percent pre-pandemic to roughly 80 percent in the most recent estimates, and Wisconsin, which recorded the lowest average rate among studied states, in the 70s.

Reported measles cases and MMR vaccination rates in the US. [Photo: JAMA (data CDC)]

The connection between declining vaccination rates and the increase in measles infections is evident. Most confirmed measles cases in the US this year—approximately 95 percent to 96 percent—have occurred in individuals who were unvaccinated or whose vaccination status was unknown. This underscores the critical role of vaccination in preventing the disease.

Measles is one of the most highly transmissible infectious diseases, making even a small drop in immunity a significant risk factor for large outbreaks. Its basic reproduction number is estimated at 12, meaning one infected person can transmit it to up to 12 others in a fully susceptible population. Without a high percentage of vaccinated individuals, the virus can spread rapidly, leading to the return of diseases once eliminated. Experts warn that if current vaccination trends persist, measles may become endemic in the US within approximately two decades, giving up all the gains made in the public health effort to eliminate it.

The troubling trend of surging measles cases is not unique to the United States, as neighboring countries Canada and Mexico are also grappling with significant and deadly outbreaks. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and World Health Organization (WHO) have highlighted these developments, warning that the “overall risk of measles in the Americas Region is considered high” due to low vaccination rates.

As of mid-June 2025, the Americas Region has confirmed 7,132 measles cases and 13 deaths. This marks a 29-fold increase compared to the 244 cases reported in the same period of 2024. Canada, Mexico, and the United States account for most of these cases. The most affected age groups across the region are among children under 5 and adolescents aged 10 to 19 years. A significant proportion of cases in the Americas (56 percent) were in unvaccinated individuals, with 35 percent having unknown or absent vaccination status. Globally, as of June 6, 2025, WHO reported 88,853 confirmed measles cases in 168 member states.

Geographic distribution of confirmed measles cases by subnational level in the Americas Region, 2025. [Photo: Pan-American Health Organization]

Mexico has reported 2,597 confirmed measles cases, including nine deaths, as of the week ending June 24, 2025. As of late May, Mexico had reported at least 1,520 cases. This marks Mexico’s worst measles outbreak in decades. The outbreak began in March and was traced to an 8-year-old unvaccinated Mennonite boy who visited relatives in Seminole, Texas, an epicenter of the US outbreak. Cases then rapidly spread through Chihuahua’s Mennonite community via schools and churches, then to workers in orchards and cheese plants.

The Mennonite community in Chihuahua has historically low vaccination rates due to misinformation about vaccines and deep-seated distrust of authorities. Some members view vaccination as a matter of “freedom of expression” and prefer “to cure themselves in their own way,” with some even intentionally exposing children at “measles parties.”

Canada has reported 3,170 measles cases (including confirmed and probable cases) and one death as of epidemiological week 23, 2025. This far exceeds the 177 cases reported in all of 2024 and constitutes the highest annual number of cases since measles elimination was achieved in 1998. The reported death was an infant born prematurely with a congenital measles infection from an unvaccinated mother. Most cases (93 percent) in 2025 were exposed within Canada. A multi-jurisdictional outbreak affecting unvaccinated individuals in communities with low coverage began in New Brunswick in October 2024 and has spread to nine provinces and territories.

While significant shares of outbreaks in the US, Canada, and Mexico have been concentrated in closely connected Mennonite communities with historically low vaccination rates, PAHO experts have not formally linked outbreaks in the three countries genetically due to limited genetic sequencing. However, travel links have been identified, such as cases in Colorado being linked to travel to Chihuahua, Mexico, and Canadian outbreaks linked to cases in Michigan, underscoring the essential point that viruses and disease do not respect borders, meaning a threat in one place is a threat to the entire world’s population. And given the highly safe and effective vaccine, such developments are a disturbing and expanding trend.

The troubling resurgence of measles and other vaccine-preventable diseases in the Americas is being further inflamed by deliberate political actions taken by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his chosen appointees. These maneuvers are widely perceived by scientific and medical communities as fostering deep mistrust in vaccines and posing a direct threat to the bedrock of childhood vaccination programs.

It should be recalled that on June 9, 2025, Kennedy abruptly dismissed all 17 members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an unprecedented move in the committee’s 61-year history that bypassed standard CDC procedures. He falsely justified the purge by claiming ACIP was “plagued with persistent conflicts of interest” and was a “rubber stamp.” Former CDC director, Dr. Tom Frieden, called these claims “total misrepresentation” and “classic misinformation,” noting that a 2009 report cited by Kennedy found administrative errors but not widespread conflicts of interest. Then, just two days later, Kennedy appointed eight new ACIP members, many of whom are known for publicly expressing vaccine skepticism, promoting misinformation, or opposing established public health practices.

During the recent two-day meeting, chair of the ACIP and one of the authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, Martin Kulldorff, announced new working groups to “evaluate the cumulative effect of the recommended vaccine schedule.” This move was criticized by Dr. Sean O’Leary of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) as an “anti-vaccine trope.”

The committee’s agenda also shifted to include revisiting “long-settled questions” such as the safety of thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative that has been scientifically debunked as having any link to autism. This echoes long-standing anti-vaccine narratives, even though most US vaccines have been thimerosal-free since 2001. In no uncertain terms, these comments and actions are an open attack on the entire public health edifice.

Additionally, the withdrawal of a US funding pledge to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, an international organization that immunizes children in the world’s poorest countries, further compounds this crisis. The US was a major funder, and this withdrawal of $1.2 billion could lead to over 1 million preventable child deaths within five years by disrupting immunization programs for 75 million children. Public health experts warn that these “destabilizing decisions, made without clear rationale, may roll back the achievements of US immunization policy, impact people’s access to lifesaving vaccines, and ultimately put US families at risk of dangerous and preventable illnesses.”

The resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles and whooping cough is directly linked to these actions and the declining trust and vaccine uptake they foster. Modeling indicates that if current vaccination rates persist, measles may become endemic again in the US within two decades, and a 10 percent decline in MMR vaccination could lead to 11.1 million measles cases over 25 years.

Preparing for privatization, rural service reduced under USPS revised delivery standards

Jane Wise



A USPS employee works outside post office in Wheeling, Illinois December 3, 2021. [AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh]

On July 1, the United States Postal Service (USPS) implemented the second phase of its revised delivery standards under the so-called “Delivering for America” plan, which is, in reality, a massive cost-cutting campaign to prepare USPS for privatization. The changes, described by management as necessary for “efficiency,” will extend delivery times for millions of residents, particularly in rural areas, as USPS seeks to eliminate trucking routes and consolidate processing operations to slash labor and transportation costs.

According to industry publication Freightwaves, the latest phase expands the Regional Transportation Optimization (RTO) initiative nationwide, adding an extra day to expected delivery times for First-Class Mail originating from remote post offices more than 50 miles from regional processing centers.

USPS claims the changes will save $36 billion over 10 years, with most savings derived from cutbacks to mail processing and transportation. Under the new standards, Sundays and holidays no longer count as transit days, meaning a two-day delivery mailed on Saturday will not arrive until Tuesday, greatly extending delivery times.

The situation is urgent and must be opposed by a rank-and-file movement from below, independent of the union bureaucrats who either openly support Delivering for America or refuse to lift a finger against it.

The Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC), in its January 2025 advisory opinion, sharply criticized the plan’s defective modeling, unproven cost-saving projections, and devastating impact on rural customers. The Commission warned that USPS is “irreversibly changing its network without laying a foundation for success.” It found that nearly half (49.5 percent) of First-Class Mail ZIP codes will experience downgraded service and concluded the changes are inconsistent with USPS’s statutory obligation under 39 U.S.C. § 101(a), to provide “prompt, reliable, and efficient services to patrons in all areas.” It emphasized the disproportionate harm to rural communities, delaying their outgoing mail and receipt of essential items such as medications and business payments.

The PRC noted specifically that USPS’s claims of improved performance were contradicted by actual outcomes in regions where they were piloted, including the cities of Richmond, Virginia and Atlanta, Georgia, where performance significantly declined following the implementation of the new network model.

But in spite of the scathing report from the PRC, the Trump administration is accelerating the plans of his predecessors to sell off the post office. These cuts are part of USPS’s broader transformation agenda initiated under former Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, appointed under Trump but serving mostly under Joe Biden.

Trump’s newly appointed Postmaster General, David Steiner, is a sitting FedEx board member who will assume office on July 14. His appointment signals the administration’s intent to strip USPS of its public mission and carve up its assets for private profit.

In its February 2025 industry update, Wells Fargo laid out a blueprint for USPS privatization, viewing these facility closures and consolidations as key steps toward carving up USPS. The bank proposed splitting the profitable parcel business from mail operations, privatizing parcel delivery through IPO or sale while retaining letter mail under minimal public funding.

Delivering for America is proceeding along many of the recommendations in the report. As Freightwaves reported, in 2021 USPS operated 427 facilities, many under short-term leases or contractors, functioning in an uncoordinated manner. Under DeJoy’s restructuring, the agency is downsizing to just 250 facilities nationwide, including 60 regional processing and distribution centers (RPDCs) and 190 local processing centers (LPCs) that sort letters, flats and parcels for final-mile delivery. This represents a massive 40 percent reduction in facilities, with devastating consequences for postal workers and the communities they serve.

Amazon is also positioning itself to capitalize on a privatized USPS. As Truthout reported, CEO Andy Jassy’s 2024 shareholder letter highlighted Amazon’s expansion into rural delivery networks, traditionally dependent on USPS for the costly “last mile.” Up until now, rural offices were so dominated by deliveries for the e-commerce giant that they functioned effectively as Amazon contractors, violating federal law by prioritizing Amazon packages over other items.

With privatization, Amazon could absorb these routes directly for massive profit, while slashing service to unprofitable regions. The company delivered over 6 billion packages in 2024 through its own network of franchised “Delivery Service Providers,” becoming the country’s biggest delivery business virtually overnight.

Truthout noted that both UPS and FedEx stand ready to absorb USPS’s package delivery business. FedEx has a last-mile station network similar in size to Amazon’s, but more evenly distributed nationwide, alongside a more efficient air network. UPS surpasses both with a larger last-mile footprint and nearly double Amazon’s air capacity, positioning these corporations to seize routes and profits if USPS’s universal service obligation is dismantled.

Far from mobilizing opposition, the unions have quietly cleared the path for privatization by accepting Delivering for America’s agenda. This year, all major USPS unions finalized new contracts that failed to include any protections against the ongoing preparations for dismantling the Postal Service.

However, support for the contracts among the memberships was abysmally low. The National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association “ratified” a contract on only 11 percent turnout, while the American Postal Workers Union is wrapping up voting on a “contract” which does not even exist because the language has not yet been finalized. Members of the National Association of Letter Carriers rejected their tentative agreement by 70 percent, only to have its terms imposed through interest arbitration. This signals immense dissatisfaction with the union leaderships and their inability to defend workers’ interests.

New mass grave uncovered at Chemmani in northern Sri Lanka

N. Ranges



The exhumation team observing a newly opened grave in Chemmani

In a chilling reminder of the decades-long anti-Tamil racist war, a new mass grave has been discovered at Sittupatthu in Chemmani, on the outskirts of Jaffna town in northern Sri Lanka. This is one of several mass grave sites that have been accidentally found at various places in the North in recent years.

The graves are further evidence of the atrocities committed during the brutal communal war unleashed by successive Colombo governments, which deployed hundreds of thousands of soldiers against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

During the 26-year war, which ended in May 2009 with the LTTE’s defeat, it is estimated that more than 100,000 people—mostly ethnic Tamils in the North and East—were killed. Thousands more were forcibly disappeared. The UN has estimated that about 40,000 civilians were killed during the final months of the war.

These two provinces remain under heavy military control, and the scars of the conflict continue to resurface periodically.

During an excavation for the construction of an electric crematorium at Chemmani’s Sinthupaththi Hindu cremation ground, a new mass grave containing fragments of human bones was discovered on February 20. Acting on a court directive, a team of archaeologists led by Professor Raj Somadeva commenced the formal excavation on May 15.

By last week, about 42 human skeletons had been found. According to news reports, 37 complete skeletal remains have been exhumed and carefully preserved for forensic analysis.

One of the skeletons found in the exhumation of mass graves at Chemmani

The Sunday Times reported that last week excavation workers also found a dress, a bag, slippers and a toy. Earlier, uncovered items included clothing, small glass bangles and a blue cloth school bag, which was identified as aid distributed by an aid organisation to schoolchildren in the North and East. So far, according to reports, three skeletal remains have been classified as those of babies younger than 10 months old.

The report states that the human remains were buried just 1.6 feet beneath the surface—an unusually shallow burial in stark contrast to the typical six-foot burial depth.

These bodies will eventually be analysed by medical experts to try to determine the cause of death. Professor Somadeva will examine artefacts such as dated cellophane wrappers and clothing to estimate the time of burial. He also noted that satellite imagery and drone photography had helped identify a second probable burial site within the cemetery.

However, if one takes into account what happened previously when mass graves have been unearthed in the North and East, it is likely that a thorough investigation will be abandoned and the truth will be buried.

This is the second time that a mass grave has been found at the same Chemmani site. Twenty-five years ago, in 1999, a grave containing 15 skeletal remains was uncovered following a confession by Corporal Somaratna Rajapakse, who had served in northern Sri Lanka during 1995–96.

Rajapakse’s disclosure came after he was convicted and sentenced to death, along with four other Sri Lankan army personnel, for the rape and murder of Tamil schoolgirl Krishanthi Kumaraswamy and members of her family who went in search of the missing girl.

He provided a chilling account of how the military had captured, tortured and summarily executed individuals who had been arrested or abducted as alleged “LTTE suspects.” The incident was extensively reported by the World Socialist Web Site at the time. According to information gathered during the 1995–96 period, over 600 persons “disappeared” in the North.

This was during the time when the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga resumed the bloody war in April 1995, ending her bogus peace talks with the LTTE.

When the mass grave was found in 1999, relatives of disappeared persons filed cases in the Jaffna courts. According to the Center for Human Rights and Development, the military later complained it could not obtain justice from the Jaffna courts and requested the cases be transferred to Anuradhapura, the capital of North Central Province.

However, after attending several court sessions, the people who filed the cases refused to continue attending, citing harassments from the military, resulting in the dismissal of the cases.

Skeleton, thought to be a child, found in Chemmani mass grave

The graves at Chemmani represent only a fraction of the widespread war crimes committed by the military with impunity, under the patronage of successive Colombo governments.

More mass graves have been uncovered across the North and East provinces, including discoveries in Thiruketheeswaram, Mannar district in 2013; the Co-operative Wholesale Establishment premises in Mannar in 2018; Kokkuthoduvai, Mullaitivu district in 2021; and Kalavanchikudy, Batticaloa district in 2014.

Excavations were conducted at these places but no further investigations subsequently took place.

The discovery of the latest mass grave has intensified concerns over the fate of the disappeared and sparked opposition among the Tamil population. On June 5, the Association for Relatives of the Enforced Disappearances in the Northern and Eastern Provinces (ARED) issued a statement and held a demonstration near the Chemmani mass grave.

Protesters raised five key demands, including an international investigation adhering to global standards and involving the UN.

Since 2011, the so-called Sri Lanka core group in the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), led by the US, UK, Canada and France, has sponsored resolutions on human rights violations during the conflict in Sri Lanka.

However, far from being concerned about war crimes, the US in particular exploited the resolutions to pressure Sri Lankan governments to distance themselves from Beijing and to align with Washington-led military preparations against China.

Under Trump, the US withdrew from the UN human rights body, accusing it of bias against Israel. The UK now heads the so-called core group.

Since 2017, ARED has been active in protests, making appeals to these international powers.

The Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF), the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK) and various other Tamil nationalist groups and diaspora organisations are responsible for cultivating the myth that these imperialist powers are interested in justice.

This is politically criminal. These same imperialist powers are all responsible for war crimes and currently are fully backing Israel’s genocide against Palestinians.

The Tamil parties are appealing to this “international community” not to address human rights, but to put pressure on Colombo to concede greater powers and privileges to the Tamil elites in the North and East.

The current Sri Lankan government is led by the Sinhala chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), which supported the communal war against the LTTE from its inception. It remains firmly opposed to any genuine investigation into military-perpetrated war crimes.

In October 2024, the JVP-led government reaffirmed its opposition to any international investigation into war crimes by rejecting a UNHRC resolution calling for such an inquiry.

The JVP won office for the first time last year by capitalising on widespread opposition to traditional capitalist parties and promises to protect democratic rights, including those of the Tamil population. It has since abandoned its commitments, along with its other empty election promises.