History rewritten? Trump’s name removed from Museum’s exhibit

History rewritten? Trump’s name removed from Museum’s exhibit

The Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History has quietly made some edits in its political displays.

The explicit reference to President Donald Trump from an exhibit about impeachment has now vanished.

According to a post by the Washington Post, the Washington DC museum made the change as part of a review that it agreed to undertake following White House pressure to remove an art museum director.

The same director who first reported the change in the exhibit.

Museum’s spokesperson said “a future and updated exhibit will include all impeachments.”

Trump signed an executive order in March calling for “improper, divisive or anti-American ideology” to be removed from the Smithsonian .

The vast museum and research institution that is a premier exhibition space for US history and culture.

The order raised concern of political interference at the institution as well as fear that his administration is undoing decades of social progress and undermining the acknowledgment of critical phases of American history.

“In September 2021, the museum installed a temporary label on content concerning the impeachments of  Trump.

It was intended to be a short-term measure to address current events at the time,the label remained in place until July 2025,” the spokesperson said in an email.

The Washington Post reported the exhibit now notes that “only three presidents have seriously faced removal.”

The temporary label – which read “Case under redesign (history happens)” – also offered information about the impeachments of former presidents Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1998, as well as Richard Nixon, who would have faced impeachment had he not resigned in 1974, the newspaper reported, citing a photograph of the label.

The spokesperson said that after a content review, the Smithsonian decided to restore the exhibit to how it looked in 2008.

The Smithsonian receives most of its budget from the US Congress but is independent of the government in decision-making.

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