City Cast DC logo
Advertisement image

Why the Holocaust Museum Self-Censored Before Trump Even Asked

Posted on April 13
Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (ajay_suresh/Wikimedia Commons)

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (ajay_suresh/Wikimedia Commons)

The Holocaust Museum has been quietly changing its content since President Trump returned to office to avoid drawing the administration’s ire. We chatted with reporter Irie Sentner — who first broke the story in Politico — to break down what happened and what it means for D.C.’s cultural institutions.

Okay, So What Did They Change?

The museum preemptively pulled a web page on “Teaching Materials on Nazism and Jim Crow,” and cancelled a one-day civic education workshop called "Fragility of Democracy and the Rise of the Nazis,” citing funding pressures and concerns about the current political climate.

Yes, But Context Matters

The Holocaust Museum is a federal museum whose board is mostly appointed by the president. At the beginning of his second term, President Trump removed about a dozen of President Biden's appointees just months into their five-year terms and replaced them with loyalists.

“That's never happened before. A president has never fired from the board a former president's appointees before their terms were up,” Sentner told us.

  • It’s unclear if the directive came from the board itself, but Sentner confirmed it came from ongoing conversations by "museum leadership.”
Inside the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (ERIC BARADAT/Getty Images)

Inside the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. (ERIC BARADAT/Getty Images)

Connecting the Dots

The Holocaust Museum's response represents a broader pattern at D.C. cultural institutions.

While Holocaust museum staff was pulling divisive programing, the Kennedy Center was undergoing a very public and thorough takeover by the Trump administration. In that instance, Trump was able to use his newly-appointed board of loyalists to push his priorities, ultimately announcing the institution would be shut down for two years starting in July for reconstruction.

Additionally, last August the White House ordered an extensive review of eight of D.C.’s Smithsonian museums, in which they identified areas that needed revising to “ensure alignment” with the administration’s view of American history ahead of the country’s 250th birthday.

Sentner explained that staff at the Holocaust Museum saw their programming changes as necessary to avoid similar public confrontation and board upheaval What makes the Holocaust Museum's situation significant is that this all happened under the rug, without the Trump administration having to order the changes.

"There's a lot of self-preservation happening,” said Sentner. “Looking at what has happened at the other peer institutions…it's a realist choice to make."

Listen to the full conversation 🎧

Share article

Hey DC

Get smart about D.C. with our news roundup and analysis.

Can't subscribe? Turn off your ad blocker and try again.
Advertisement image

Local Civics

See All
Local CivicsMarch 25

Malcolm X Park Closure Sparks Community Outcry

Most of Malcolm X Park is closing until early summer for repairs. Here is everything we know so you can plan your picnic in peace.

Enjoying the park before it closes. (Kaela Cote-Stemmermann/City Cast DC)
Local CivicsMarch 16

In Controversial Move, FBI Sends New Grads to Patrol DC

The FBI just announced that it's sending its upcoming agent class from Quantico to do a 60-day foot patrol rotation in D.C. alongside loc...

FBI officers seen walking in LeDroit Park. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Local CivicsMarch 9

The McMillan Development Is Finally Here — Will It Live Up To the Hype?

For more than a decade the McMillan filtration site was one of D.C.’s ugliest political battles. Now, the redevelopment is here, but will...

A new housing development at the old McMillan site in Washington, DC (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Local CivicsFebruary 26

The Downfall of DC's Compass Coffee

Last week, British coffee chain Caffè Nero bought Compass Coffee at auction after it went bankrupt.

Outside of a Compass Coffee at 650 F. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Local CivicsFebruary 5

Jeff Bezos Gutted the Washington Post. Now What?

The Post, owned by Jeff Bezos, laid off up to a third of its staff.

Washington Post building located on K Street NW. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Local CivicsFebruary 2

Eleanor Holmes Norton’s Son Also Wanted Her to Retire

D.C.’s Congressional Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton announced last week that she’s not going to run again.

Eleanor Holmes Norton speaks during a press conference about the deployment of the National Guard. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)
Local CivicsJanuary 29

Can the Kennedy Center Survive Trump?

This week, Composer Philip Glass, a 2018 Kennedy Center honoree renowned for his pioneering contributions to modern music, announced he n...

US President Donald Trump sits at the center of a long table and presides over a board meeting at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, on March 17, 2025. He is surrounded by five people on each side.
Local CivicsJanuary 28

3 Big Legislative Priorities To Watch in Virginia in 2026

The Virginia General Assembly officially convened in Richmond on Jan. 14, marking the start of one of the most consequential and politica...

Virginia State Capitol. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)