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Freedom of speech is shifting under the Trump administration. We're exploring how

A series from NPR's Morning Edition will explore who felt censored before President Trump returned to office and who feels stifled now.
Jackie Lay
/
NPR
A series from NPR's Morning Edition will explore who felt censored before President Trump returned to office and who feels stifled now.

Many Americans are worried that their First Amendment right to free speech is fading.

NPR's Morning Edition has talked to legal experts, activists, immigration lawyers, scientists, students, teachers and others over several weeks to understand why.

Our series "The State of the First Amendment: The Right From Which All Other Rights Flow" will explore who felt censored before President Trump returned to office and who feels stifled now.

Our reporting found that scientists are scrubbing reports and federal grant applications of words the Trump administration . Some student activists are afraid that participating in protests could lead to deportation. Teachers are nervous about a where students or parents can file complaints about diversity, equity and inclusion lessons in class with the U.S. Department of Education.

"When students make connections to events in history that don't frame the current administration in a positive light and then ask questions, it gives me pause," says E., a high school history teacher, who asked NPR to use only her first initial for fear she could be reported for speaking out. "I've had to hold back, sometimes changing the subject abruptly, telling them that I can't comment."


and visit every day this week for in-depth stories on "The State of the First Amendment: The Right From Which All Other Rights Flow." 


Yet plenty of others — including anti-abortion activists, the far-right activist group Moms for Liberty and members of university Republican clubs — say they feel more free today to express views without fear of a backlash now that President Trump is back in office.

"We now have more members who are willing to help us publicize the club, attach their faces to the club, and be outwardly and openly conservative than we did before the election," says Miguel Muniz, president of the College Republicans at the University of California, Berkeley.

Free speech ranked as the second most important issue for voters heading into the 2024 presidential election, ahead of crime, immigration and health care, by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression taken a month before the election. Republicans were more likely to rate it "very important" and nearly half of Republican respondents said they spoke less freely under President Joe Biden than they did under President Trump.

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That may be why soon after President Trump was sworn back into office, one of the first actions he took was to sign an aimed at "restoring freedom of speech and ending federal censorship."

His critics say his concern for free speech is only for speech his administration finds acceptable.

You can find .

Copyright 2025 NPR

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Leila Fadel is a national correspondent for NPR based in Los Angeles, covering issues of culture, diversity, and race.
Arezou Rezvani is a senior editor for NPR's Morning Edition and founding editor of Up First, NPR's daily news podcast.
Taylor Haney is a producer and director for NPR's Morning Edition and Up First.
Kyle Gallego-Mackie
Kyle Mackie is an associate producer in NPR's Content Division. Prior to joining NPR in 2022, she was the news director at KHOL/Jackson Hole Community Radio in Jackson, Wyoming. The station won its first three Regional Edward R. Murrow Awards and multiple Society of Professional Journalists "Top of the Rockies" awards under her leadership. Mackie helped launch, hosted and produced KHOL's flagship weekly podcast Jackson Unpacked. She was also a key member of the reporting, production and editorial team behind the limited podcast series Facets: Voices of the Mountain Life, which won the 2022 Local Independent Online News (LION) Product of the Year Award for the small revenue tier.
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