Smithsonian Institution says it will update exhibit to reflect all impeachments of US presidents following backlash.
The parent organisation of a top-visited history museum in the United Statesย has denied that political pressure played a role in the removal of a display about the impeachments of US President Donald Trump.
The Smithsonian Institution, which runs the National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, said on Saturday that it removed the โtemporaryโ placard for failing to meet the museumโs standards in โappearance, location, timeline, and overall presentationโ.
โIt was not consistent with other sections in the exhibit and moreover blocked the view of the objects inside its case. For these reasons, we removed the placard,โ the institution said in a statement.
โWe were not asked by any Administration or other government officials to remove content from the exhibit.โ
The Smithsonian Institution, which runs 21 museums and the National Zoo, said the impeachment section of the museum would be updated in the coming weeks to โreflect all impeachment proceedings in our nationโs historyโ.
The statement comes after The Washington Post on Thursday reported that the museum removed an explicit reference to Trumpโs impeachments last month, resulting in its exhibit about impeachment incorrectly stating that โonly three presidents have seriously faced removalโ.
The Post, citing an unnamed person familiar with the exhibit plans, said the display was taken down following a โcontent review that the Smithsonian agreed to undertake following pressure from the White House to remove an art museum directorโ.
The museumโs removal of the display drew swift backlash, with critics of Trump casting the development as the latest capitulation to the whims of an authoritarian president.
โYou can run, but you cannot hide from the judgment of history,โ Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said on Friday.
โSo, hereโs my message to the president: no matter what exhibits you try to distort, the American people will never forget that you were impeached โ not once, but twice.โ
Trump has, with lightning speed, moved to exert greater control over political, cultural and media institutions as part of his transformative โMake America Great Againโ agenda.
In March, the US president signed an executive order to remove โimproper ideologyโ from the Smithsonian Institutionโs properties and deny funding for exhibits that โdegrade shared American valuesโ or โdivide Americans based on raceโ.
During his first term, Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives twice, in 2019 and 2021, but he was acquitted by the Senate on both occasions.
He was the third US president to be impeached, after Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton, and the only US president to be impeached twice.
Former President Richard Nixon faced near-certain impeachment before his resignation in 1974 in the wake of the Watergate scandal.


