The executive order also calls for the replacement of memorials and monuments removed since 2020.
The
“Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History” order directs Vice
President JD Vance to eliminate what he finds “improper” from the
Smithsonian Institution, including its museums, education and research
centers, and the National Zoo. The White House fact sheet describing the order said it will focus on removing “anti-American ideology.”
The
institution, the official keeper of the American story, has operated
independently as a public-private partnership created by an act of
Congress in 1846. The order is an unprecedented act to edit an
institution that has been expanding over many decades to include a
wider, richer and more diverse telling of the nation’s history.
“Over
the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread
effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a
distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth,” the
executive order says. “This revisionist movement seeks to undermine the
remarkable achievements of the United States by casting its founding
principles and historical milestones in a negative light.”
President
Donald Trump departs after speaking at a Women’s History Month event at
the White House on Wednesday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Trump’s
order calls the museum’s evolving approach a reconstruction of history
that is “inherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise
irredeemably flawed.”
Historians were immediately dismayed.
“Attacking
the idea that telling the whole story of the United States is an
ideological plot to cast the United States in a negative light testifies
to a stunningly brittle insecurity about our nation and its past,” said
Chandra Manning, a professor of American history at Georgetown
University.
“It
seems to suggest that if we allow anyone to hear the whole story of
challenges that Americans have overcome, our nation will shatter. The
American people are not so fragile as all that,” Manning said.
Trump’s
executive order demands an “ideological purity test” and “restores
neither truth nor sanity,” said Adam Rothman, an American history
professor at Georgetown University. “The president’s proclamation
disrespects the thousands of sincere and dedicated researchers,
curators, scientists, guides, interpreters, docents and countless other
people who work hard every day to preserve and tell the nation’s story
truthfully, and in ways that educate and inspire the American public.”
Trump’s
order cited examples of exhibits he says portray American and Western
values as “inherently harmful and oppressive.” It also prohibits any
transgender women from being included in the forthcoming American Women’s History Museum, which currently exists as an online exhibit and estimates construction could be more than 10 years away.
“Once
widely respected as a symbol of American excellence and a global icon
of cultural achievement, the Smithsonian Institution has, in recent
years, come under the influence of a divisive, race-centered ideology,”
the order says.
And
it takes specific aim at one of the newest editions to the
Smithsonian’s portfolio of 21 museums — the National Museum of African
American History and Culture, which opened in 2016 under the leadership
of historian Lonnie G. Bunch III, who the became the Smithsonian’s 14th
and first African American secretary in 2019.
Historian
Lonnie G. Bunch III, the founding director of the National Museum of
African American History and Culture, seen in 2019. (Marvin Joseph/The
Washington Post)
The
order alleges that the museum “has proclaimed that ‘hard work,’
‘individualism,’ and ‘the nuclear family’ are aspects of ‘White
culture.’ ” Those phrases appeared in an infographic on the museum’s
website five years ago, in a section addressing the way race is often
talked about. It was removed in 2020, after Donald Trump Jr. sparked criticism over those words in a social media post.
The
Smithsonian is governed by a Board of Regents, which is made up of nine
citizens, six members of Congress, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.
and Vance.
Vance,
the executive order states, will work with Trump’s executive staff “to
effectuate the policies of this order through his role” and will work
with Congress and the Office of Management and Budget to withhold funding for exhibits that he decides “degrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race.”
It’s
unclear how much power Vance may have to implement the order beyond
arguing to withhold funding. Smithsonian officials did not return a
request for comment.
Federal
money makes up 62 percent of the institution’s annual budget. Private
funding of about $300 million annually makes up the balance, according
to its website.
Restoring
any monuments or memorials removed since Jan. 1, 2020, is also part of
the executive order. That was the start of an American reckoning with
the way Confederate icons were honored in public spaces. Numerous
statues and memorials were removed or relocated by local governments.
The
order does answer Philadelphia’s plea for federal funding to restore
Independence Hall in time for the nation’s 250th anniversary next year.
It says that historical sites should remind Americans “of our our
extraordinary heritage, consistent progress toward becoming a more
perfect Union, and unmatched record of advancing liberty, prosperity,
and human flourishing.”
But
Manning said Americans crave a fuller accounting of the past because it
also inspires in the way our nation has overcome adversity.
“They
are not interested in empty cheerleading,” she said. “They want to know
about the fellow human beings, with all their strengths and all their
complications, with all their flaws, with all their infinite variety,
who shaped the past, and in so doing also shape our present.”