Trump has reignited a cultural firestorm with a sweeping executive order aimed at reshaping the nation’s most prominent museums, starting with the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
The 2025 directive orders the Smithsonian Institution to eliminate what the administration calls “divisive” and “improper ideological” programming, specifically naming Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives as culprits in what Trump describes as a campaign to “rewrite American history.”
The National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC), which has drawn millions of visitors since opening in 2016, was directly called out for promoting what Trump claims are “distorted” narratives about the founding and evolution of the United States.
“There’s been a deliberate effort to replace objective facts with ideology,” Trump said during a closed-door signing ceremony at the White House. “Our museums should unify Americans, not divide them based on race, gender, or political beliefs.”
Under the order, VP JD Vance will oversee a review of all content, exhibitions, and programs across the institution. His job: to root out anything that “degrades shared American values” or is “inconsistent with federal law and policy.”
The executive order impacts the full range of the Smithsonian’s 21 museums and the National Zoo, but it’s the focus on the African American museum that has drawn the strongest reaction. Trump’s directive characterizes several exhibits as promoting racial division, particularly those that address slavery, segregation, police brutality, and systemic inequality.
Critics say the move is a blatant attempt to whitewash American history and undermine decades of work dedicated to telling the full story of the Black experience in America.“
“This is not about unity,” said one senior historian who asked to remain anonymous. “It’s about erasing the uncomfortable truths that challenge the sanitized version of America Trump wants to promote.”
The order also mandates the removal or reworking of DEI-related exhibits across the Smithsonian system, including at the upcoming Women’s History Museum, which the administration insists must “not recognize men as women in any respect.”
Trump has instructed the Interior Department to reinstate monuments, statues, and memorials removed since 2020, many of which were taken down following the murder of George Floyd and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
The administration argues that removing those monuments was part of a “false reconstruction of American history.” Trump, who has repeatedly voiced disdain for BLM and social justice movements, views this order as a cultural corrective.
Meanwhile, civil rights groups, educators, and museum professionals across the country are calling for public resistance.
“This is about more than one museum,” said a spokesperson from the NAACP. “It’s about whether we allow our government to erase Black history under the guise of unity.”
The future of cultural institutions like the National Museum of African American History and Culture may now hang in the balance.
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