Leading historical and cultural organizations are sharply condemning actions by the current administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which they assert constitute a severe undermining of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The American Historical Association (AHA) has issued a forceful statement describing the measures taken against the federal agency as an “evisceration” that threatens the nation’s public cultural landscape.
Scale of Impact Unveiled
The AHA statement details immediate and drastic consequences resulting from the DOGE’s actions. Hundreds of grants previously awarded by the NEH have reportedly been terminated. Furthermore, approximately 75% of the NEH’s dedicated staff have been placed on administrative leave. According to the AHA, these directives were communicated to personnel via letters originating from a DOGE microsoft.com email address, a detail that has raised questions about the process and official channels used.
A “Frontal Attack” on Public Culture
The American Historical Association’s condemnation is supported by a coalition of peers, with their statement signed by 26 organizations representing a broad spectrum of the humanities and cultural sectors. These groups collectively describe the actions against the NEH as a “frontal attack on the nation’s public culture.” The language used in the statement is unsparing, deeming the cuts and personnel actions “unpatriotic, anti-American, and unjustified.”
Defending the Role of the Humanities
The organizations argue strenuously that the NEH plays a vital and non-partisan role in the health of American democracy. The AHA statement explicitly outlines the agency’s functions, emphasizing that it supports democratic principles and civic life through its core activities. These include fostering essential humanities research, supporting comprehensive education programs, facilitating the preservation of historical and cultural resources, building institutional capacity within cultural organizations, and funding diverse public programming that reaches communities nationwide.
Calls for Congressional Action and Data Collection
In response to the perceived crisis, both the American Historical Association and the National Humanities Alliance (NHA) are mobilizing their extensive networks. They are actively encouraging their members and the broader public to contact their congressional representatives. The clear objective of this outreach is to urge lawmakers to intervene and take steps to “save the NEH” from the deep cuts and operational disruptions it is currently facing.
Adding to the advocacy efforts, the National Humanities Alliance is undertaking a critical data collection initiative. The NHA is actively gathering information regarding grants that have been canceled since March 31, 2025. This effort aims to quantify the full scope of the impact on projects and institutions across the country, providing concrete evidence to support their calls for the NEH’s protection.
Historical Context and Mandate
The news highlights the inherent tension sometimes present in the leadership of federal cultural agencies. While acknowledging that the position of NEH chair is a political appointment, the AHA and allied organizations stress that the agency itself was never intended to serve solely a president’s specific ideological agenda. They recall the fundamental principles enshrined in the NEH’s founding legislation, which explicitly affirmed that “the arts and the humanities belong to all the people of the United States.” This founding mandate, they argue, underscores the NEH’s role as a steward of shared national heritage and intellectual life, a role they contend is being severely undermined by the recent actions.
The unified voice of these prominent historical and cultural bodies signals a significant pushback against the administration’s efficiency drive, warning that cost-saving measures must not come at the expense of the vital infrastructure supporting the nation’s public culture and democratic discourse.
