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The N.E.H. Does What Republicans Always Wanted. DOGE Slashed It Anyway.
The N.E.H. Does What Republicans Always Wanted. DOGE Slashed It Anyway.

New York Times

time07-04-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Times

The N.E.H. Does What Republicans Always Wanted. DOGE Slashed It Anyway.

Tim Henderson was up late last Wednesday night, keeping an eye on the weather as catastrophic storms barreled across Tennessee toward Nashville. Around midnight, his email pinged. Amid overlapping National Weather Service alerts of damaging hail, tornadoes and flash floods, he read the message: Humanities Tennessee, where Mr. Henderson is the chief executive, had just lost all its federal funding. It's not as if Mr. Henderson didn't see this news coming. As with the actual tornadoes, the economic and ideological tornadoes emanating from Washington first touched down at some distance, but their destruction was always headed this way. Employees at the National Endowment for the Humanities had already learned that the so-called Department of Government Efficiency was recommending staff cuts of up to 80 percent. The N.E.H. is one of the least-known of the federal agencies, but its work reaches a huge number of Americans, including those in Republican districts. It awards grants that fund research fellowships, programs at museums and historic sites, website development and documentary filmmaking, among a host of other projects related to the public humanities. But it also disburses a great chunk of its appropriation — some $65 million of an annual budget of roughly $210 million — directly to nonprofit humanities councils in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and five territories. These independent affiliates of the N.E.H. then reallocate those funds to programming tailored to the people of their own state. Through the work of the state humanities councils, in other words, the N.E.H. is doing exactly what Republicans have always said they wanted to do with federal funds: It gives federal money back to the states. Humanities Tennessee, for example, funds traveling museum exhibitions and speaking series, neighborhood story projects, writing workshops for teenagers and a magnificent book festival, just for starters. Chapter 16, Humanities Tennessee's vibrant daily web publication about the literary life of this state, is rare among nonprofit media outlets. (I know that because for 10 years I was its editor.) Federal grants to state councils were designed to be 'seed money,' as Mr. Henderson puts it — a way to keep the lights on while the organizations seek philanthropic support from donors and corporations, and other grant funding, to expand their offerings. The federal funds are meant to create the conditions for public-private partnerships to bloom. But some states are wealthier than others, and some benefit from serving a populace that doesn't need to be persuaded of the value of the humanities. Before they can begin to make the case for supporting humanities programming, more than a few state councils must work, first, to explain what the humanities even are. Mr. Henderson has fielded calls from people looking for the Humane Society. In a university setting, the term generally refers to subjects like history, religion, philosophy, literature and art. In the context of the public humanities, the definition can be harder to pin down: 'It's how human beings understand themselves, interact with each other, come to make communities — all of those things about being human,' Mr. Henderson said in a phone interview. 'In the public humanities, we're trying to make those things immediate and relevant. But that's hard to write an elevator pitch for.' Which is why federal appropriations are so crucial. These funds are marshaled with the greatest possible care to benefit the most people. The savings achieved by cutting them 'amounts to a rounding error' in the context of the federal budget, as a statement from the National Humanities Alliance notes, but many state humanities councils would not survive without them. The N.E.H. itself may not survive. I am not, I admit, a disinterested party here. As editor of Chapter 16, I was an independent contractor, not involved in Humanities Tennessee's other operations. But I had a front-row seat to the crucial work a state humanities council does — work that most Americans never recognize. I can't even count the times that people arriving at the Southern Festival of Books, a Humanities Tennessee initiative, have asked me where the ticket booth is. They always look astonished when I tell them there isn't one. Festival events are free. In the context of other planned cuts — a far from complete list includes funding for science (including the science of storm prediction), public schools, Meals on Wheels, health care for impoverished people, the federal lands and parks that belong to all of us, protections for the air we breathe and the water we drink — losing the N.E.H. might not seem like the biggest tragedy in the world. This is exactly what the architects and enforcers of Project 2025 want us to do: They want us to fight over who deserves the biggest piece of a pie that is so diminished and distorted it doesn't even look like a pie anymore. They are leading us, willingly, into a scarcity mind-set. But these resources are not scarce. They have already been approved by Congress. Over the years, certain Republicans have attempted to generate controversy by calling the N.E.H. an expense the government could not afford. But in the past, funding has always been preserved because the humanities are not ultimately a partisan issue. Whichever party held the White House, whichever party controlled Congress, the National Endowment for the Humanities survived. That's because Americans really like book festivals and local history museums and summer writing camps for teenagers. We like seeing hometown heroes celebrated and remembered. We like hearing hometown authors read from their books. We like being invited to join a conversation in which our opinions and our experiences matter. We especially like it when such gifts are available to everyone, and not just to those who can afford the price of a ticket. We live in an age of abounding ironies, and this one is a doozy. Eliminating federal funding for the humanities saves next to no money, but it will cost the American people something precious: one of the few federal institutions whose whole purpose is to foster community and thoughtful discussion across the polarities that increasingly divide and depress us. And surely that is part of the point. Maybe it's the whole point. So long as we're busy fighting with one another, this wrecking-ball administration thinks, we won't notice that it's dismantling the protections we rely on and destroying the treasures we love. In a social media post last week, Humanities Tennessee urged Americans to call members of Congress and let them know how the public humanities matter. Which storybook characters did our children meet at the book festival? What museum exhibit taught us something we didn't know about the place where we have always lived? How does it feel to join a respectful conversation about a contentious subject? We need to tell the people who represent us a story — a true story — that reminds them of our shared humanity. Because the concept of a shared humanity is something too many of them, and too many of us, have lately all but forgotten.

Trump administration cuts threaten Southern Festival of Books, arts funding across state
Trump administration cuts threaten Southern Festival of Books, arts funding across state

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Trump administration cuts threaten Southern Festival of Books, arts funding across state

A new Trump administration effort to slash funding at a federal humanities organization may threaten Nashville's renowned Southern Festival of Books and other arts organizations across Tennessee. Humanities Tennessee received notification this week its $1.2-million National Endowment for the Humanities grant would be terminated, even though the money was congressionally appropriated. The group has organized the annual literary festival in Nashville for nearly four decades, and executive director Tim Henderson said the abrupt termination of its grant could threaten programming ranging from the festival to reading programs for students and grants for rural museums and historical societies. Henderson said the termination notification was "highly unusual" and came from an external email address, not through the usual NEH channels. But the developing situation aligns with ongoing, often chaotic efforts by the Trump administration to slash federal jobs and clamp down on the flow of billions of dollars that help fund agriculture, health and other programs at the state level. "We received a letter that came directly to me from a non-NEH email address, supposedly signed by the acting chair, terminating our contract," Henderson said in an interview Friday, noting the communication appeared legitimate as every other state humanities council received similar letters. The New York Times on Tuesday reported the Trump administration had forced out the agency leader at the National Endowment for the Humanities, announced widespread layoffs within the agency and signaled plans to cancel outstanding grant contracts. It's unclear if the acting director has the legal authority to actually cancel these funds. The grants were congressionally appropriated, meaning elected officials, not agency leaders, voted to approve the funds. "We've reached out to all the folks in Congress to get some sense of what they understand, the clarification we can get about this appropriation they voted on and made to put that public investment back into the state of Tennessee," Henderson said, noting they have not yet received a response from Tennessee's congressional delegation. The National Endowment for the Humanities has granted more than $13 million to Tennessee programs since 2019, according to an NEH fact sheet. These funds have supported more than 73 different projects, including local history programs, an East Tennessee State University study of appalachia and annual Humanities Tennessee funding. "The initial public investment is less than a dollar per person to cover the state," Henderson said of the current grant. "It funds work that supports cultural life. It helps us preserve, understand and access our stories -- out histories, culture and arts − that lead to a better quality of life for Tennesseans. It's a small investment to organizations that do a lot with a little." A similar story has played out in multiple federal organizations in recent weeks. On Thursday, a federal judge temporarily blocked an effort to abruptly claw back $11 billion in health and mental health funding in an initial Trump officials continue to say the effort led by the Department of Government Efficiency, which is not an official government department, is needed to cut government bloat and reduce inefficiences at the federal level. But groups have been blindsided by large-scale cuts that had previously been congressionally guaranted through 2025 and even into 2026. "We certainly appreciate and support efforts to look for ways to work more efficiently, and we do it as an organization. I don't know people who prefer bloat and waste," Henderson said. "We should, with nuance and time and consideration, find and fix that. The approach of cutting across the board doesn't appear to do that." In a message Henderson shared in the community on Thursday, he noted the loss of grant funding could impact myriad events across the state, including student reading programs in schools, writing workshops for high school students, opportunities for students to participate in history programs and other free reading programs. "While we stand up for the continued NEH funding, which is appropriated by Congress and at their discretion, our team is also working feverishly to continue our private fundraising efforts," Henderson said in the community note, which asked for supporters to contact their congressional delegation and consider privately supporting the group. "We know we are not alone in feeling the impact of federal budget cuts to our programs and people. We know you have many causes you care for deeply. And we thank you for your efforts to stand up for the humanities, for all Tennesseans and all Americans." This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Southern Festival of Books threatened by Trump administration cuts

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