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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, a three-judge panel based in Boston, has put on hold a judge's order requiring the National Park Service to reinstall?exhibits that it removed under President Donald Trump's directive targeting displays?that "inappropriately disparage Americans past or living." Circuit Court of Appeals halted a judge’s order requiring that the National Park Service reinstall 'exhibits' it had removed as a result of President Donald Trump's directive to target displays that "inappropriately disparage Americans living or dead."

Last month, U.S. district judge Angel Kelley in Boston concluded that the displays had been removed from the nation's park as part of the illegal effort by the administration to "rewrite" the nation's past with a whiteout pen.

She reached this conclusion after a lawsuit filed by groups representing park conservators, historians, and scientists. They accused the administration of launching a 'conducted censorship campaign' to erase aspects of American History that didn't?conform with Trumps ideals.

A panel of the '1st Circuit, made up only of judges appointed under Democratic presidents, agreed to suspend?Kelley’s ruling while the administration appealed it. They said the government would likely prevail.

Requests for comment were not immediately responded to by the U.S. Department?of?Interior which oversees the National Park Service and the lawyers?for plaintiffs. Reporting by Nate Raymond, Boston; editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Cynthia Osterman

(source: Reuters)