
Some government webpages briefly went dark Friday after federal agencies were told to comply with a White House order on removing certain language pertaining to diversity, equity and inclusion. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Pages for the Federal Aviation Administration, the Census Bureau and the Justice Department were among those that went blank. The FAA and Justice Department later came back online.
Main Idea: Some federal websites, including pages tied to the FAA and Justice Department, briefly went dark as President Donald Trump’s administration moved to remove language and content linked to “gender ideology” and DEI.
Key Points:
Federal website shutdowns at the FAA, DOJ, and CDC can delay access to safety, health, and public service information for households, patients, and small businesses.
No clear positive impact identified.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Signed the executive order driving the webpage removals and is the central political actor in the article.
Named acting director of the Office of Personnel Management whose email instructed employees not to promote “gender ideology.”.
Its website briefly went dark as part of the compliance actions described in the story.
Its web destination reproductiverights.gov was removed amid the broader federal content purge.
Its webpages briefly went blank and later came back online, making it a key affected agency.
One of the federal webpages that briefly went dark, but not a central decision-maker in the story.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentMentioned as one of the health agencies whose webpages were removed.
Mentioned as one of the health agencies affected by the webpage removals.
Several webpages were down on Friday as part of the broader compliance effort.