DOGE used ChatGPT to cancel $100 million in humanities grants under anti-DEI agenda

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Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency deployed ChatGPT with a simple prompt to identify and terminate nearly 1,500 National Endowment for the Humanities grants. The AI-driven approach flagged projects ranging from Holocaust documentaries to Indigenous language archives as DEI-related, resulting in a clawback of over $100 million and triggering lawsuits alleging First Amendment violations.

DOGE Deploys ChatGPT to Identify Grants for Termination

Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency turned to ChatGPT when tasked with identifying National Endowment for the Humanities grants to cancel under the Trump administration's anti-DEI agenda. Court documents filed in lawsuits against the agency reveal that two DOGE employees, Justin Fox and Nate Cavanaugh, arrived at the NEH in March 2025 with no background in humanities but a clear mandate: eliminate projects that conflicted with President Trump's priorities

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Rather than conducting careful analysis of funded projects, the employees pulled short summaries from the internet and fed them into the AI chatbot with a straightforward prompt: "Does the following relate at all to D.E.I.? Respond factually in less than 120 characters. Begin with 'Yes' or 'No.'"

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. The DOGE employees did not appear to question ChatGPT's judgments as they compiled their list of problematic projects

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Sweeping and Bizarre Results from AI-Driven Review

The results of using ChatGPT to evaluate humanities projects proved both sweeping and sometimes bizarre. Building improvements at an Indigenous languages archive in Alaska risked "promoting inclusion and diverse perspectives," according to the chatbot. A longstanding grant to digitize Black newspapers and add them to a historical database was flagged as related to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Work on a 40-volume scholarly series on the history of American music also made the list

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Even more striking, a documentary about Jewish women's slave labor during the Holocaust was deemed problematic because its focus on gender risked "contributing to D.E.I. by amplifying marginalized voices." An effort to catalog and digitize the papers of Thomas Gage, a British general in the American Revolution, was accused of "promoting inclusivity and diversity in historical research"

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Mass Cancellations Create a 'Clean Slate' for 'America First' Agenda

Two weeks after their arrival, the DOGE employees sent a master list of 1,477 problematic awards to Michael McDonald, the endowment's acting chairman. This represented nearly every active grant made during the Biden administration. McDonald, a veteran of the agency, agreed to let DOGE cancel grants, creating what he later described as a "clean slate" for the 'America First' agenda

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The cancellations resulted in a clawback of over $100 million, representing nearly half of the agency's annual budget. The mass terminations threw many organizations into upheaval, forcing some projects to shutter entirely. Since its creation in 1965, the National Endowment for the Humanities has awarded more than $6.5 billion to support over 70,000 projects. In a deposition, McDonald said that in more than two decades at the agency he could recall fewer than a half-dozen grants being revoked, all because a recipient had failed to carry out promised work

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Legal Challenge Alleges First Amendment Violations and Discrimination

Documents filed in two lawsuits now reveal new details about how the mass cancellations took shape, with little input or pushback from the agency's leadership. In a joint motion filed on Friday, the plaintiffs—the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Historical Association, the Modern Language Association, and the Authors Guild—argue that Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency illegally took control of the agency and carried out cuts that violated the First Amendment and the equal protection clause of the Constitution

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Source: NYT

Source: NYT

While the cancellations were sweeping, the lawsuits argue they were driven by a campaign against DEI that discriminated on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender and other characteristics. The plaintiffs are asking for reinstatement of the federal grants and want the historical record to show the motives and methods behind what they characterize as a betrayal of the agency's mandate to respect "the diverse beliefs and values" of all Americans, as its founding legislation states

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"Our federal government is sending a message that only a narrow definition of humanities can be supported, celebrated and invested in, and that there are only a narrow set of people, culture and experiences that are worth understanding in depth," said Sarah Weicksel, the executive director of the American Historical Association

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. The case raises questions about the appropriate role of AI in government efficiency efforts and whether automated decision-making can adequately assess the nuanced work of humanities scholarship.

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