
An indication for the State Division stands outdoors the Harry S. Truman Federal Constructing in Washington, D.C., on July 11, 2025.
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The State Division is eradicating all posts on its public accounts on the social media platform X made earlier than President Trump returned to workplace on Jan. 20, 2025.
The posts will probably be internally archived however will now not be on public view, the State Division confirmed to NPR. Workers members had been advised that anybody eager to see older posts must file a Freedom of Info Act request, in accordance with a State Division worker who requested to stay nameless for concern of retaliation by the Trump administration. That might differ from how the U.S. authorities usually handles archiving the general public on-line footprint of earlier administrations.
The transfer comes because the Trump administration has eliminated large swaths of data from authorities web sites that battle with the president’s views, together with environmental and well being knowledge and references to ladies, folks of shade and members of the LGBTQ+ neighborhood. The federal government has additionally taken down indicators at nationwide parks mentioning slavery and references to Trump’s impeachments and presidency on the Nationwide Portrait Gallery.
The White Home has additionally launched a revisionist historical past account of the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol and has changed the federal government’s coronavirus useful resource websites with a web page titled “Lab Leak: The True Origins of Covid-19.”
The elimination of State Division X posts from public view seems to be much less about ideological variations with previous statements and extra about management of future messaging. The directive will see the elimination of posts from Trump’s first time period in addition to these below then-Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama.
In response to NPR’s questions in regards to the removals, an unnamed State Division spokesperson stated the purpose “is to restrict confusion on U.S authorities coverage and to talk with one voice to advance the President, Secretary, and Administration’s targets and messaging. It would protect historical past whereas selling the current.” The spokesperson stated the division’s X accounts “are certainly one of our strongest instruments for advancing the America First targets and messaging of the President, Secretary, and Administration, each to our fellow People and audiences world wide.”
The State Division didn’t reply to NPR’s particular questions on whether or not content material can even be faraway from different social media websites or whether or not there will probably be methods for the general public to entry archived posts with out submitting a Freedom of Info Act request.
“All archived content material will probably be preserved in alignment with Federal Report Act necessities and Division insurance policies,” the spokesperson stated.
Some present and former State Division workers in addition to teachers fear that it’ll make the historic file of the federal government’s communications and actions more durable to hint.
“For all the various challenges, actually, that social media has launched into politics, it has additionally created this degree of an imperfect however actually some degree of transparency,” stated Shannon McGregor, a professor on the College of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who research the function of social media in politics. “Even when [the X posts are] nonetheless accessible in some sort of archive, it nonetheless places up a larger barrier by way of getting access to that data.”
In an analogous however unrelated transfer this week, the CIA abruptly took down its World Factbook, a extensively used reference handbook seen as an authoritative supply of details about international locations, their economies, their demographics and extra. The CIA’s announcement stated the publication, which has been printed since 1962 and first went on-line in 1997, was being “sundown” and gave no additional clarification for the choice.
Accounts for embassies, ambassadors, bureaus affected
The State Division directive applies to all of the division’s lively official X accounts, together with accounts for U.S. embassies and missions, ambassadors and division bureaus and packages, in accordance with screenshots of inner steerage seen by NPR. The division has used its posts on X and different social media websites for years to share all the things from coverage bulletins and speeches by the secretary of state and ambassadors, to truth sheets for vacationers and pictures from world wide.
“These posts to be eliminated aren’t simply press statements. They embody our embassies’ July 4 livestreams, images of COVID vaccine donations to different nations, vacation greetings, condolences, cultural programming, and the day-to-day file of diplomacy. They present who the U.S. engaged with, when, and the way—usually the one public file of these moments,” Orna Blum, a long-serving senior overseas service officer and public diplomacy specialist who retired final 12 months, wrote in a LinkedIn publish in regards to the directive.
“As soon as eliminated, there will probably be no simple public, searchable entry to this historical past. [The Freedom of Information Act] is gradual, discretionary, and sometimes redacted. It is a backstop—not an alternative choice to open archives,” Blum wrote.
Since Obama, the primary president to make use of an official account on the social media web site then known as Twitter, left workplace in January 2017, handing over on-line accounts has been a part of the transition course of between administrations. Some content material is archived, however these information usually stay in public view.
Federal company accounts, together with @StateDept on X, are handed alongside to the incoming administration intact, which means that posts made below earlier administrations stay seen on their timelines. The State Division additionally has publicly accessible archived variations of its web site below earlier administrations relationship again to President Invoice Clinton.
Some high-profile accounts, together with these of the president, vice chairman, first girl and White Home, are dealt with in a different way. For instance, the @POTUS deal with on X is handed over from one president to the following with its present roster of followers, however posts from the outgoing president are moved to a brand new archive account, similar to @POTUS44 for Obama, @POTUS45 for the primary Trump time period and @POTUS46Archive for Biden.
The State Division steerage says the X removals don’t apply to official accounts which can be already dormant and marked as “archived,” just like the @SecPompeo account utilized by Trump’s first-term secretary of state, Mike Pompeo.
New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani just lately confronted related questions and issues about transparency and preserving authorities information after his administration started to delete posts made by his predecessor, Eric Adams, below the @NYCMayor deal with on X. Nevertheless, Adams’ posts might be present in a public archive maintained by town.
Because the State Division archives previous posts, different businesses publish excessive content material
In isolation, the elimination of State Division social media content material is a minor change unrelated to bigger overhauls of American diplomacy and overseas coverage and the administration’s widespread adjustments to the federal forms.
However Trump’s second-term messaging technique has been outlined by a mindset that social media content material is governing and that governing can be achieved via content material creation.
The Division of Homeland Safety, the Labor Division and different federal authorities accounts have shared posts that include white supremacist rhetoric and nods to conspiracy theories like QAnon. And Trump administration staffers continuously use X to spar with critics and publish memes that help the president.
On Friday, Trump confronted uncharacteristic pushback from some fellow Republicans after sharing a video on his social media web site that contained false claims of election fraud — and a brief snippet of an unrelated video that contained a racist depiction of former President Obama and first girl Michelle Obama as apes.
That publish was deleted, after the White Home initially defended it as an “web meme.”