**FILE** U.S. Department of Justice headquarters in Washington, D.C. (Coolcaesar, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons)
**FILE** U.S. Department of Justice headquarters in Washington, D.C. (Coolcaesar, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons)

The Trump administration has ended a decades-old federal school desegregation order in Louisiana, the latest move in what legal experts and historians describe as a methodical dismantling of civil rights protections under the Project 2025 blueprint.

Announced April 29, the Department of Justice declared the 1966 court-enforced desegregation decree involving Plaquemines Parish schools no longer necessary. Officials dismissed the long-standing order as a โ€œhistorical wrongโ€ and used its termination to signal that other civil rights-era mandates may soon be repealed.

โ€œWe are getting America refocused on our bright future,โ€ Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said.

The Justice Department and Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill filed a joint motion stating, โ€œThe parties are satisfied that the United Statesโ€™ claims have been fully resolved.โ€ 

Officials said that the district was declared integrated in 1975, but the court never formally closed the case, and records have since vanished.

Trumpโ€™s second term has unfolded in lockstep with Project 2025, a hard-line conservative roadmap that calls for purging the government of diversity programs, civil rights enforcement and what it calls โ€œwoke ideology.โ€ย 

Within days of taking office, Trump signed an executive order eliminating all chief diversity officers in the federal government, terminating racial equity contracts, and halting programs intended to remove discriminatory barriers.

He has revoked the 1965 executive order on equal employment opportunity, cut funding to minority- and women-owned businesses, and frozen grants focused on racial disparities in health care. The administration has labeled DEI efforts โ€œimmoralโ€ and, in one executive action, accused cultural institutions of promoting โ€œnational shame.โ€

Diversity itself, officials now say, is a โ€œcurse word.โ€

Inside the Justice Department, appointees have privately discussed withdrawing from other desegregation orders, calling them an outdated burden on schools, according to a source familiar with the conversations. Yet dozens of districts across the South remain under court supervision to ensure racial integration โ€” a legacy of the governmentโ€™s post-Brown v. Board of Education enforcement.

Civil rights advocates argue these agreements remain vital because segregation was never fully dismantled. However, officials aligned with Trump insist that the consent decrees are relics that have outlived their purpose.

Historians say the administrationโ€™s actions extend beyond legal rollbacks and into aggressively reengineering American memory. Trump has criticized the Smithsonianโ€™s National Museum of African American History and Culture, accusing it of portraying Western culture as โ€œinherently harmful.โ€ Some government websites briefly removed references to Harriet Tubman and other Black historical figures before restoring them under public pressure.

โ€œItโ€™s not just about erasing DEI. Itโ€™s about reshaping how this country sees itself,โ€ said Lawrence Rosenthal, chair of the Center for Right-Wing Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. โ€œProject 2025 replaces the institutions of democracy with a loyalty test to one authoritarian vision.โ€

Meanwhile, research continues to show the lasting power of desegregation. 

A new report from the National Bureau of Economic Research followed Black children relocated under Chicagoโ€™s 1966 Gautreaux program. Those who moved to predominantly White neighborhoods earned up to $34,000 more by age 38, were more likely to be homeowners, and lived in communities with lower poverty. The benefits were most pronounced for children who moved at younger ages.

โ€œHow on earth can you teach about Rosa Parks without talking about racism?โ€ asked Mark Bray, a civil rights scholar at Rutgers University. โ€œThis is an attempt to rewrite the past โ€” and in doing so, control the future.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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3 Comments

  1. Speaking from a black man, Desert Storm Veteran, Law Enforcement Veteran and Offshore Supt., I have seen all the racism in every aspect of life even as a child in public schools. The United States of America does not respect Black people unless they benefit from them and even then you are still considered beneath them. Everything that Trump is being allowed to do is by a majority country that wants things to be back like it was during slavery. How can Trump be allowed to erase Black History but not erase White History. America is no place for black folks. We are not wanted or valued as a human being here.

  2. I just read this same article in the Seattle Medium. Its word for word, verbatim! Not much forethought in the argument; just a copy and pace attempt to promote division and fear among the races!

    1. Thank you for reading and commenting! Stacy M. Brownโ€™s story from May 2025 was posted on The Washington Informerย and Seattle Medium websites through both publicationsโ€™ membership in the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA). Stacy writes for NNPA and The Washington Informer, so sometimes youโ€™ll see his stories on our website and used by other NNPA outlets. We appreciate your feedback on the content and will keep it in mind for continued coverage. We hope you continue to read our stories to stay informed!ย 

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