White House will celebrate Black History Month as some government 
		agencies skip after anti-DEI order
		
		 
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		 [February 20, 2025]  
		By MATT BROWN and MICHELLE L. PRICE 
		
		WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration will celebrate Black History 
		Month at the White House on Thursday, preserving a tradition at the same 
		time that President Donald Trump's executive order ending the federal 
		government's diversity, equity and inclusion programs has disrupted its 
		observance elsewhere. 
		 
		The ceremony comes as Trump has called DEI programs “discrimination” and 
		pushed to eradicate diversity programs from the government, directed 
		that DEI workers eventually be laid off and exerted similar pressure on 
		the private sector to shift to an exclusive focus on merit. 
		 
		The sweeping effort has sown discord and confusion across federal 
		agencies, which have variously interpreted the order to limit how they 
		can acknowledge race in history and culture or report demographic data 
		on race and gender. 
		 
		Joining Trump at the East Room event will be Black political figures and 
		activists who have been his vocal supporters. The guests, according to a 
		White House official, include Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South 
		Carolina; Republican Rep. John James of Michigan; prison reform advocate 
		Alice Johnson, whom he pardoned in 2020; Alveda King, a niece of civil 
		rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.; and Herschel Walker, the football 
		legend who is Trump’s choice as U.S. ambassador to the Bahamas. 
		 
		Other guests will include figures from sports and entertainment, 
		including former ESPN host Sage Steele; former NFL player Jack Brewer; 
		and rap stars Kodak Black, Lil Boosie and Rod Wave, according to the 
		official, who was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on 
		condition of anonymity. 
		
		
		  
		
		The event was originally scheduled to be held last week but was 
		postponed due to inclement weather. 
		 
		In the wake of his executive order, the Defense Department issued 
		guidance declaring “identity months dead” and said that working hours 
		would no longer be used to mark cultural awareness months such as Black 
		History Month, Women’s History Month and National Disability Employment 
		Awareness Month. 
		 
		That seemed to clash with a National Black History Month proclamation 
		signed the same day by Trump, which called for “public officials, 
		educators, librarians, and all the people of the United States to 
		observe this month with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and 
		activities.” 
		 
		While the White House has issued its position, agencies of the 
		government have discretion on whether to continue to recognize Black 
		History Month, according to the official. 
		 
		On Feb. 1, the first day of Black History Month, Transportation 
		Secretary Sean Duffy announced that his department “will no longer 
		participate in celebrations based on immutable traits or any other 
		identity-based observances.” And in a diplomatic cable, Secretary of 
		State Marco Rubio said the agency’s removal of DEI policies would 
		dovetail with “eliminating our focus on political and cultural causes 
		that are divisive at home and deeply unpopular abroad.” 
		 
		The administration has issued a deadline to schools and universities to 
		eliminate diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money. Major 
		corporations have backtracked on DEI policies in hiring, promotion and 
		workplace culture in recent months, with many citing potential legal 
		challenges from the administration. 
		 
		Black History Month has been recognized by every U.S. president since 
		1976, including Trump during his first term. 
		 
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            President Donald Trump arrives to speak at the Future Investment 
			Initiative (FII) Institute summit in Miami Beach, Fla., Wednesday, 
			Feb. 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell) 
            
			
			
			  
            “Black History is American history. And similar to the story of our 
			nation, it is a story of strength, resilience, and dogged 
			perseverance,” said CJ Pearson, a national co-chair of the 
			Republican National Committee's youth advisory council. Pearson, who 
			is Black, has been an outspoken defender of Trump against Black 
			civic leaders, civil rights advocates and Democrats who lambast the 
			president as racist. 
			 
			“President Trump’s anti-DEI policies aren’t promoting racism but 
			what they are doing is manifesting the dream of the great Martin 
			Luther King, Jr.: a nation where one isn’t judged by the color of 
			their skin but instead by the content of their character,” said 
			Pearson, who will attend the White House event. 
			 
			Other Black Republicans aren't so sanguine about the 
			administration's current course or what it portends for the GOP's 
			nascent inroads with Black voters or other communities of color. 
			 
			“Trump can build upon the coalition he pulled together in November 
			with Blacks and Asians and Hispanics and young folks,” said Raynard 
			Jackson, a Republican strategist. “But if they leave it the way it 
			stands right now, Trump is going to destroy the very coalition he so 
			marvelously brought to the table in November.” 
			 
			To Jackson, DEI is a catch-all for liberal policies that are 
			“unrecognizable” from the original intent of civil rights laws meant 
			to promote the social and economic progress of Black Americans. But 
			in removing and denigrating the policies, Jackson said, the White 
			House risked being labeled as discriminatory by offering no 
			alternative framework for how disadvantaged communities can get 
			ahead. 
			 
			“How do you have diversity without it being a mandated bean-counting 
			situation?” Jackson asked. "They’ve done a masterful job at telling 
			me what they’re against. I’m waiting to hear what they’re for.” 
			 
			During the 2024 campaign, Trump tried to reach Black voters through 
			in-person events in Atlanta, Chicago and New York. His campaign 
			courted Black celebrities and media personalities to boost his 
			message. Trump's Black conservative allies, including Rep. Byron 
			Donalds, R-Fla., conducted roundtables at Black barbershops and bus 
			tours through majority-Black cities. 
			 
			But Trump also frequently denigrated Black communities in his pitch 
			and made claims that pitted voters of color against immigrants, who 
			he said were taking “Black jobs” and “Hispanic jobs.” 
			 
			The efforts to boost support among Black voters seemed to have some 
			success. He won a larger share of Black voters than he did in 2020, 
			particularly among young Black men, according to AP VoteCast, a 
			nationwide survey of more than 120,000 voters in the 2024 election. 
            
			  
			Overall, about 16% of Black voters supported Trump in November, 
			while about 8 in 10 voted for Democrat Kamala Harris. But that 
			represented an improvement for Trump from 2020, when only 8% of 
			Black voters backed him and about 9 in 10 went for Democrat Joe 
			Biden. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Price reported from New York. 
			
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