President Donald Trump has signed an enforcement order behind the closed doors on Thursday, directing federal agencies and Smithsonian to remove what the order calls “separation” and “anti -American” content from museums and national parks, sources told the order to ABC News.
The Order – called the “Restoration of Truth and Health in American History” – directs the Vice President and the Secretary of the Interior to restore federal parks, monuments, monuments and statues, “which have been removed or changed incorrectly to continue the false review of history or incorrectly minimize or neglect certain historical figures.”

On this December 18, 2023, submit a photo, workers prepare a memorial to eliminate the Confederation in the National Cemetery in Arlington, Arlington, Virginia.
Kevin Wolf/AP, file
The order also directs Vice President JD Vance, who is a member of Smithsonian Board of Regents, to work to remove what he claims
The White House said in the full text of the executive order that in the last decade the rewriting of history has thrown American stages into “negative light” and therefore directs museums to remove some historical contexts related to race and gender.
He added that future funds for the organization would be banned from exhibits or programs that “worsen shared American values, divide Americans based on race or encourage programs or ideologies incompatible with federal law.”
She also banned the upcoming American Women’s Museum from recognizing transgender women in every way.
The order states that the exhibits and programs that seek to eliminate the undermining of the “incomparable heritage of the nation to advance freedom, the rights of the individual and human happiness”, causing his success “by its essence racist, sexist, depressing or otherwise unacceptable.”
The examples given by the Order include an exhibit at the American Museum of Smithsonian, called the “form of power: stories of race and American sculpture”, which the order claims that “encourages the opinion that race is not a biological reality, but a social construction” and exposed to the National Museum of Afro -American Museum “He proclaims that the” hard work “,” individual American American history and culture that the Order has said that they “proclaim” hard work. “
ABC News turned to Smithsonian for comment.