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Trump is granted a court order to stop restoring climate park exhibits and slavery.

The U.S. appeals court lifted an order on Thursday that required the Trump administration to restore dozens of exhibits it had removed from national parks, including those on slavery and climate changes. The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Boston, is a three-judge panel. Circuit Court of Appeals halted a judge’s order requiring that the National Park Service reinstall displays that were removed as a result of the Republican President's directive that targeted displays that "inappropriately disparage Americans living or past." Last month, U.S. District Court Judge Angel Kelley in Boston concluded that the displays had been removed from national parks as part the illegal effort by the administration to "rewrite" the nation's past with a whiteout pen.

Kelley came to this conclusion after a lawsuit filed by groups representing park conservationists. historians and scientist who accused the Trump administration of a concerted campaign of censorship aimed at erasing parts of American history which did not "conform" with Trump's ideas.

A panel of the 1st Circuit, composed exclusively of judges appointed by Democratic Presidents, agreed to suspend Kelley's decision while the administration appeals. The court said that the government would likely win on appeal, as the plaintiffs did not demonstrate irreparable harm to them during the litigation.

Brooke Menschel is a lawyer representing the plaintiffs in the Democracy Forward liberal advocacy group. She called the ruling "a temporary procedural setback" but a disappointment, as the court did not rule on the legality of the administration's actions.

Menschel stated that "Unfortunately, this decision will allow the administration to continue to remove and alter interpretive materials which are crucial for millions of tourists to understand the history of our nation."

In a press release, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of the Interior (which oversees the National Park Service) said that it "encouraged Americans" to visit its cultural and historical sites, and to engage in meaningful discussions about the moments which have shaped the United States.

DZONES OF EXHIBITS REMOVED At least 51 exhibits have been removed or discarded in parks across the country to comply with Doug Burgum, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum’s implementation of a executive order Trump signed on March 20, 2025. Trump's executive orders targeted what he called "a revisionist movement" which portrayed the United States as "inherently racism, sexism, oppression or otherwise irredeemably flaw." It directed that changes be made in parks across the country.

Among the items removed was an exhibit in the 'President's House' of Philadelphia's Independence National Historical Park, which described the ownership by George Washington of enslaved persons.

In February, the National Parks Conservation Association and American Association for State and Local History filed a lawsuit to challenge their removal.

Kelley, appointed by Democratic former President Joe Biden had stated that they would suffer from "aesthetic and recreational harms" without a preliminary order.

The appeals court said that these groups only had one member who claimed she would suffer "any specific harm" without an injunction based on the absence of "park material which could educate her kids."

The court stated that "as the Department points, however, plaintiffs do not claim that any material has been removed yet from the parks the member identifies that she plans to visit specifically this summer." (Reporting and editing by Chizu, Nomiyama and Will Dunham in Boston)

(source: Reuters)