Trump’s Latest Attack on the NEA

Every story a writer tells is one this Administration cannot control

Electric Literature must raise $35,000 to fund our next chapter. EL’s incoming Executive Director and Publisher, Denne Michele Norris, plans to grow EL’s reach and influence by every measure, while maintaining our sharp, independent spirit. We need your help to ensure our continued success.

Donate now to join us in building EL’s future.

Dear Reader,

Late Friday night, Electric Literature—along with at least 40 other literary arts organizations— received a notice from the National Endowment for the Arts that our 2025 grant has been terminated. The reason given was that our work does not “reflect the nation’s rich artistic heritage and creativity as prioritized by the President.” This morning, the NEA’s literary arts staff announced their last day would be May 30. 

This is a transparently autocratic effort to dismantle the nation’s most important arts granting organization and to broadly undermine artistic progress. After threatening so many, it is no coincidence that Trump has turned his attacks to the arts.

Creative expression is the lifeblood that vivifies a free and democratic culture. Trump is obsessed with a heritage and legacy of his own imagination. For him, literature is forward facing and therefore dangerous. Every story, even about the past, is a new story. Every story a writer tells is one Trump cannot control.

The NEA has supported hundreds of publishers, 600 translators, and 3,800 writers. The stories told as a result of that support will live on. Electric Literature will continue to publish culturally enriching stories about the past, present, and future with honesty and heart. Please support our work.

Sincerely, 

Halimah Marcus

Executive Director, Electric Literature

More Like This

A Cruise Ship Novel Set in the Aftermath of 9/11

In “All the World Can Hold,” Jung Yun positions the cruise ship as a locus of performance, family, and unexpected trauma

Mar 10 - D/Annie Liontas

Exclusive Cover Reveal of “Asmodeus” by Rita Indiana, Translated by Achy Obejas

The cover is a mix of heavy metal, Dominican history, and psychedelic dread

Feb 26 - Electric Literature

7 Novels That Bear Witness to Latin America’s Dirty Wars

These authors interrogate the suppressed histories and horrors of colonial imperialism

Jan 29 - Jahia de Rose
Thank You!