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Trump’s English language order upends America’s long multilingual history – March 16, 2025 – The Conversation

Published: March 16, 2025 8:36am EDT

U.S. President Donald Trump holds a signed executive order as he speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on March 7, 2025. (Pool via AP)

Across its nearly 250-year history, the United States has never had an official language. On March 1, U.S. President Donald Trump changed that when he signed an executive order designating English as the country’s sole official language. The order marks a fundamental rupture from the American goverment’s long-standing approach to languages.

“From the founding of our Republic, English has been used as our national language,” Trump’s order states. “It is in America’s best interest for the federal government to designate one — and only one — official language.”

This new order also revokes a language-access provision contained in an earlier executive order from 2000 that aimed to improve access to services for people with limited English. Federal agencies now seem to have no obligation to provide vital information in other languages.

Despite some reactions in the New York Times, Washington Post and elsewhere, it remains unclear whether Trump’s executive order will face legal or political challenges. Amid continual attacks from the Trump administration on established norms, this decree may pass with relatively little resistance, despite a deeper meaning that extends far beyond language.

Multilingual realities and monolingual fantasies

The U.S. has a long multilingual history, beginning with the hundreds of Indigenous languages indelibly linked to these lands. The secondary layer are colonial languages and their variants, including French in Louisiana and Spanish in the Southwest. In all historical periods, immigrant languages from around the world have added substantially to the linguistic mix that makes up the U.S.

Today, New York is one of world’s most linguistically diverse cities, with other U.S. coastal cities not far behind. According to data from the Census Bureau, one-fifth of all Americans can speak two or more languages. The social, economic and cognitive benefits of bilingualism are well-established, and there is no data to support the assertion that speaking more than one language threatens the integrity of the nation state.

“It is in America’s best interest for the federal government to designate one — and only one — official language.” This new order also revokes a …“It is in America’s best interest for the federal government to designate one — and only one — official language.” This new order also revokes a … 

Source Links: https://theconversation.com/trumps-english-language-order-upends-americas-long-multilingual-history-252163


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