logo
White House orders review of Smithsonian museums and exhibits to ensure alignment with Trump directive

White House orders review of Smithsonian museums and exhibits to ensure alignment with Trump directive

CNNa day ago
The White House is conducting a comprehensive internal review of exhibits and materials at the Smithsonian Institution – the organization that runs the nation's major public museums – in an effort to comply with President Donald Trump's directive about what should and shouldn't be displayed.
The initiative, a trio of top Trump aides wrote in a letter to Smithsonian Institution secretary Lonnie Bunch III, 'aims to ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism, remove divisive or partisan narratives, and restore confidence in our shared cultural institutions.'
It marks the latest move by the Trump administration to impose the president's views on US cultural and historical institutions and purge materials focused on diversity.
Earlier this year, Trump signed an executive order accusing the Smithsonian Institution of having 'come under the influence of a divisive, race-centered ideology' that has 'promoted narratives that portray American and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive.' Trump's action put Vice President JD Vance in charge of stopping government spending on 'exhibits or programs that degrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race, or promote programs or ideologies inconsistent with Federal law and policy.'
The letter released Tuesday — signed by Trump aides Lindsey Halligan, the senior associate staff secretary; Vince Haley, the Domestic Policy Council director; and Russell Vought, the Office of Management and Budget director — says the review will focus on public-facing content, the curatorial process to understand how work is selected for exhibit, current and future exhibition planning, the use of existing materials and collections, and guidelines for narrative standards.
Eight key, Washington, DC-based Smithsonian museums will be part of the first phase of the review: the National Museum of American History, the National Museum of Natural History, the National Museum of African American History and Culture, the National Museum of the American Indian, the National Air and Space Museum, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. Additional museums, the letter said, will be announced in a second phase.
The Smithsonian said it was 'reviewing' the letter, telling CNN in a statement it planned to work 'constructively' with the White House.
'The Smithsonian's work is grounded in a deep commitment to scholarly excellence, rigorous research, and the accurate, factual presentation of history. We are reviewing the letter with this commitment in mind and will continue to collaborate constructively with the White House, Congress, and our governing Board of Regents,' the statement said.
The Smithsonian Institution is the world's largest museum complex, including 21 museums and the National Zoo. Nearly 17 million people visited Smithsonian properties last year, according to the museum's website. Admission at nearly all the museums is free. The Smithsonian began a review of its own in June, and has repeatedly stressed its commitment to being nonpartisan. The institution told CNN in July that it was committed to an 'unbiased presentation of facts and history' and that it would 'make any necessary changes to ensure our content meets our standards.'
The letter calls on each museum to designate a point of contact to provide details on plans for programming to highlight the country's 250th anniversary. It also asks for a full catalog of all current and ongoing exhibitions and budgets, a list of all traveling exhibitions and plans for the next three years, and all internal guidelines, including staff manuals, job descriptions, and organizational charts, along with internal communications about exhibition artwork selection and approval. That material is due within 30 days, with 'on-site observational visits' and walkthroughs expected.
Within 75 days, Trump administration officials will schedule and conduct 'voluntary interviews with curators and senior staff.'
And within 120 days, museums 'should begin implementing content corrections where necessary, replacing divisive or ideologically driven language with unifying, historically accurate, and constructive descriptions across placards, wall didactics, digital displays, and other public-facing materials.'
Last month, the National Museum of American History removed a temporary placard referencing Trump's two impeachments from an exhibit related to the presidency, prompting public outcry against the museum and claims it was capitulating to Trump. In follow-up statements, the museum system insisted the placard's removal was temporary and denied it had been pressured by any government official to make changes to its exhibits. It was reinstalled days ago, with some changes.
The exhibit now is set up in a way that places information about Trump's two impeachments in a lower spot, with some changes to the placard's text.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump predicts 25% chance of ‘bad meeting' with Putin in Alaska on Ukraine
Trump predicts 25% chance of ‘bad meeting' with Putin in Alaska on Ukraine

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump predicts 25% chance of ‘bad meeting' with Putin in Alaska on Ukraine

President Trump Thursday said he has high hopes of making progress to a Ukraine peace deal at a Friday afternoon summit with Russia's Vladimir Putin in Alaska, but admitted there is a 1 in 4 chance of a 'bad meeting.' 'There is a 25% chance that this meeting will not be a successful meeting, in which case I'll return to run the country,' he said in a radio interview. 'If it's a bad meeting, I'm not calling anybody. I'm going home,' Trump added. 'But if it's a good meeting, I'm going to call (Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy) and the European leaders.' Trump said his main goals will be to convince Putin to agree to a ceasefire and to pave the way to a three-man summit with Zelenskyy, which he teased could take place very soon after the Anchorage sit-down and might even also take place in Alaska. Trump's remarks came after Putin praised his counterpart for 'energetic and sincere' efforts to end the war in Ukraine. With both sides seeking to spin expectations ahead of the Anchorage sit-down, Putin gathered a group of top advisers to the Kremlin to hail the chances of a breakthrough on Ukraine and a host of other issues. 'The (Trump) administration is making, in my opinion, quite energetic and sincere efforts to stop the fighting, stop the crisis and reach agreements that are of interest to all parties involved in this conflict,' Putin said. The summit is scheduled to kick off at 11:30 am Anchorage time, which is 3:30 pm in New York. The two leaders plan to hold a joint press conference after the meeting as well as a lunch with the two nations' delegations. It's the first meeting between Putin and an American president since he launched his invasion of neighboring Ukraine in 2022, and the first time he and Trump have met since 2019. Even as he talked up the chances of progress, Putin has not even hinted at any retreat from his hard-line demands, such as gobbling up four Ukrainian provinces, including land it hasn't yet seized on the battlefield. He sought to dangle the possibility of progress on nuclear weapons and economic issues, which he may use an enticement to get Trump to make further concessions on Ukraine. The Kremlin strongman said he hoped the 'huge, and unfortunately hitherto untapped, potential' of expanded economic ties between the U.S. and Russia would be on the agenda along with Ukraine. Putin wants to end Russia's exile from the Western financial system following economic sanctions imposed by Washington, the European Union and others. Trump has not yet lifted these punishments but says he wants to end Russia's economic pariah status. Trump said Wednesday that there will be 'severe consequences' if Putin does not agree to end the war at the summit, but refused to elaborate. He's moved ahead with 'secondary sanctions' against India for buying Russian oil but has put threatened measures against other Moscow trading partners on hold at least until after the Anchorage meeting. The decision to grant Putin the face-to-face meeting with Trump is controversial with administration critics and Western allies, who fear the wily Kremlin strongman will use his skills as a master manipulator to bamboozle Trump. Ukraine and European allies are nervous about being left completely out of the meeting, even though Trump has vowed he won't cave on key issues like surrendering land for peace and says he wants to broker a follow-up summit including Zelenskyy. U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer embraced Zelenskyy in London on Thursday in a show of British support for the embattled ally and aides said they discussed security guarantees for Kyiv in any possible peace deal. _____

Exclusive-Brazil lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro warns of more US sanctions, maybe tariffs
Exclusive-Brazil lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro warns of more US sanctions, maybe tariffs

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Exclusive-Brazil lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro warns of more US sanctions, maybe tariffs

By Marcelo Teixeira and Luciana Magalhaes WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Brazilian Congressman Eduardo Bolsonaro, the son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, told Reuters on Thursday that he expects additional U.S. sanctions against Brazilian officials and possibly more tariffs due to a legal crackdown on his father. In an interview at the Reuters bureau in Washington after meetings with senior U.S. officials, the lawmaker said he saw no way for Brazil to negotiate a lower U.S. tariff on its exports without concessions from the Brazilian Supreme Court. "The Supreme Court justices have to understand they've lost power," he said. "There is no scenario where the Supreme Court emerges victorious from this whole imbroglio. They're in conflict with the greatest economic power in the world." The younger Bolsonaro's advocacy in Washington has put him at the center of bilateral tensions after U.S. President Donald Trump slapped a 50% tariff on Brazilian goods and financial sanctions on the Brazilian judge overseeing prosecution of the elder Bolsonaro, demanding an end to a "witch hunt" against the former president. "I think he's an honest man... This is really a political execution that they're trying to do with Bolsonaro," Trump told reporters on Thursday. Jair Bolsonaro is currently on trial before Brazil's top court over an alleged plot to overturn the 2022 election that he lost. He denies any wrongdoing. Eduardo Bolsonaro described the U.S. tariffs on Brazilian beef, coffee, fish, footwear and other goods as "bitter medicine" aimed at curbing what he called an out-of-check legal offensive against his father. "I've told everyone trying to approach this only through the lens of trade: it won't work. There needs to be a signal first to the U.S. that we're resolving our institutional crisis," he said. The U.S. State Department ratcheted up pressure on Wednesday, moving to revoke and restrict visas on government officials and their family members from countries including Brazil due to their ties with an exchange program involving Cuban doctors. Eduardo Bolsonaro said he expects those restrictions will soon hit Health Minister Alexandre Padilha and probably leftist ex-President Dilma Rousseff for their roles in the program. Rousseff was the chief of staff and successor to current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva when his second term ended in 2010. Representatives for Padilha and Rousseff did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Lula has dismissed Trump's demands as an affront to national sovereignty and said he has refused to "humiliate" himself with a call to the White House. In a Reuters interview last week, he called Eduardo Bolsonaro and his father "traitors" for courting Trump's intervention. Brazil's top court is investigating both Bolsonaros over their appeals to Trump. Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has increased pressure on the former president, putting him under house arrest and forbidding contact with his son in the U.S. or foreign officials. In Thursday's interview in Washington, Eduardo Bolsonaro said he expected a U.S. response to that crackdown, including sanctions against Viviane Barci de Moraes, a high-powered Brazilian attorney married to Justice Moraes. Bolsonaro also said he could see more tariffs on Brazilian goods on the way. "I could expect more tariffs, because Brazilian authorities have not changed their behaviors," he said. The Brazilian lawmaker, who moved in March to the United States in an effort to garner Trump's support for his father, said he had been advocating for sanctions targeting Moraes and his family, with tariffs as a "last resort." He said immediate U.S. sanctions against other Supreme Court justices seemed unlikely, given the focus on isolating Moraes, whom he called a "gangster," a "psychopath" and a "mafioso." The Supreme Court did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Moraes has described his rulings, which have been upheld by the wider court, as a defense of Brazilian democracy under constitutional law. In an interview with Reuters last month, Jair Bolsonaro said he expected his son to seek U.S. citizenship to avoid returning to Brazil. The younger Bolsonaro declined to comment on the details of his immigration status, but said he and his family had permission to stay in the United States "for a good while," and left the door open to seeking asylum and eventually citizenship. Sign in to access your portfolio

US taking 'special measures' to protect people possibly exposed in court records hack
US taking 'special measures' to protect people possibly exposed in court records hack

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US taking 'special measures' to protect people possibly exposed in court records hack

By Sarah N. Lynch and Nate Raymond WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. government is taking unspecified "special measures" to protect people potentially exposed in a recent hack of court records, a top U.S. Department of Justice official said on Thursday. The hack of the federal judiciary's filing systems has raised concerns across the judiciary since it was disclosed last month, in part because of reports that data about confidential informants and other sealed case files may have been accessed. Although details of the intrusion - or intrusions - have yet to be made public, a person familiar with the matter said unspecified foreign actors had been identified as the culprits. The New York Times reported on Tuesday that investigators believed Russia was at least partly responsible. "We're aware of the issue," Acting Assistant Attorney General Matt Galeotti told reporters at a briefing. "There's different filing measures that are being put in place. We're also taking other different technical steps." He added that in cases involving individuals who were possibly "subject to some sort of release of information," the department is "taking special measures in those cases." Galeotti did not elaborate on the nature of those measures, and the DOJ and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts did not immediately answer questions about his comments. The person familiar with the matter said chief judges throughout the country were notified in mid-July that at least eight federal court districts had been targeted by the hackers. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store