Trump’s DEI Order Canceled A Student Concert. Then The Donations Came Pouring In
- The National Institutes of Health continues to fund over $1.3 billion in diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, despite President Donald Trump's order to eliminate them.
- At least $441 million of NIH grants specifically mention DEI in their descriptions, according to a report by the watchdog group Do No Harm.
- Programs like a $28 million grant to Mount Sinai aim to integrate an anti-racist mindset into their medical research until 2028.
- Ivory Tower officials have expressed that blending ideology with science could distort funding priorities and harm institutional credibility.
6 Articles
6 Articles


One Gov’t Agency Still Spending $1,000,000,000 On DEI Despite Trump’s Order To Cut It Out
By Thomas English, Contributor Daily Caller News Foundation | March 25, 2025 The National Institutes of Health (NIH) continues to fund more than a billion dollars in diversity, equity and inclusion programs, even after President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to eliminate them. While other agencies have moved to eliminate the “illegal and immoral programs” targeted in Trump’s day-one executive order, NIH is still funding over $1.3 billion…
NIH Still Spending $1,000,000,000 On DEI Despite Trump’s Order To Cut It Out
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) continues to fund more than a billion dollars in diversity, equity and inclusion programs, even after President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to eliminate them. While other agencies have moved to eliminate the “illegal and immoral programs” targeted in Trump’s day-one executive order, NIH is still funding over $1.3 billion […] NIH Still Spending $1,000,000,000 On DEI Despite Trump’s Order To Cut It…
Trump’s DEI Order Canceled A Student Concert. Then The Donations Came Pouring In
CHICAGO — A double bass wasn’t put in the hands of Mateo Estanislao until years after many of his peers had already started playing.But by high school, Estanislao took the stage of the Cincinnati Music Hall through Equity Arc, a Chicago-based nonprofit that supports young musicians of color. The show seated each student-musician next to a professional performer of the same instrument.“That was one of the first times I felt like I was truly part …
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