- June 30, 2026
- Updated 7:39 pm
Federal Judge Blocks Removal of National Park Exhibits
A federal judge has temporarily halted actions by the National Park Service to remove or alter signs, films, and other materials in national parks due to a directive from former President Trump. This ruling accuses the Trump administration of censorship and provides temporary relief to advocacy groups challenging the directive.
The directive sought the removal or alteration of materials deemed to ‘inappropriately disparage Americans’ or present the United States ‘in a negative light.’ Judge Angel Kelley of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruled to pause the enforcement of this executive order. The National Park Service must also restore exhibits dismantled or altered within three weeks.
The plaintiffs, comprising a coalition of advocacy groups, initiated legal action against the executive order in February. Changes mandated by the order had led to the removal of various displays, including plaques about slavery at Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, a sign addressing climate change at Fort Sumter in South Carolina, and a sign focusing on Indigenous people at Acadia National Park in Maine.
Another federal judge previously restricted further changes to the slavery exhibit at the President’s House Site in Philadelphia, pending another lawsuit filed by the city itself.
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