The American Historical Association has released a statement condemning the evisceration of the National Endowment for the Humanities, as the current administration’s Department of Government Efficiency has terminated hundreds of grants and put 75% of staff on leave. “The NEH and the grants it administers nourish our democracy through research, education, preservation, institutional capacity building, and public programming in the humanities for the benefit of the American people,” the statement reads. “This frontal attack on the nation’s public culture is unpatriotic, anti-American, and unjustified.”
To date, 26 organizations have signed on to this statement.
We encourage our members to contact your congressional representatives today through the National Humanities Alliance’s action alert, and urge them to save the NEH. The NHA is also collecting information about current grants that have been canceled since March 31, 2025. If you or your organization has been affected by the NEH’s grant terminations, please complete this form.
Historians Defend the National Endowment for the Humanities and American Public Culture
Approved by AHA Council, April 4, 2025
The American Historical Association condemns the evisceration of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
On April 3, 2025, the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), using a nongovernmental microsoft.com email address, notified hundreds of recipients that grants awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) have been terminated. These grantees include state humanities councils, museums, teachers, researchers, and organizations that serve the public, including the American Historical Association. Later that night, letters were sent from a DOGE microsoft.com email address notifying roughly 75 percent of NEH staff that they have been placed on administrative leave. This frontal attack on the nation’s public culture is unpatriotic, anti-American, and unjustified.
The NEH and the grants it administers nourish our democracy through research, education, preservation, institutional capacity building, and public programming in the humanities for the benefit of the American people. These grants support work ranging from professional development workshops for teachers to the preservation of historic sites, research initiatives, and a wide array of programs for politically and demographically diverse audiences. Despite these significant contributions to public culture, DOGE justifies the termination of these programs by declaring their destruction to be “an urgent priority for the administration.”
The grant termination notices refer to a reallocation of funds to “a new direction in furtherance of the President’s agenda.” The specific reallocations remain unknown, but that agenda, as several executive orders have made clear, prioritizes narrow political ideology over historical research, historical accuracy, and the actual historical experiences of Americans.
The NEH was established in 1965 by an act of Congress. The legislation affirmed that “the arts and the humanities belong to all the people of the United States.” The AHA recognizes that the chair of the NEH always has been a political appointment made by the president. The overall agency and its grantmaking programs, however, include a wide range of topics, perspectives, and approaches. The agency was never intended to be, nor has it been, focused solely on a single president’s narrow—and in this case, deeply ideological—agenda.
Under the guise of “safeguarding” the federal government, DOGE has terminated grants and diminished staffing to a level that renders it impossible for the agency to perform its mission responsibly and with integrity. These actions imperil both the education of the American public and the preservation of our history.
The following organizations have signed on to this statement:
American Society for Theatre Research
Association for Computers and the Humanities
Association for Documentary Editing
Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies
Association of Ancient Historians
Association of University Presses
Berkshire Conference of Women Historians
Central European History Society
Conference of Latin American History
Conference on Asian History
French Colonial Historical Society
German Studies Association
Historians for Peace and Democracy
Immigration and Ethnic History Society
Labor and Working Class History Association
LGBTQ+ History Association
Medieval Academy of America
Mormon History Association
New England Historical Association
Phi Alpha Theta Executive Committee
Polish American Historical Association
Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
Society for US Intellectual History
Society of Architectural Historians
Western History Association
Western Society for French History