The U.S. State Department is removing all social media posts from its X accounts dating before President Trump's second term, affecting content from previous administrations. Access to the deleted material will require Freedom of Information Act requests, unlike public archives used in past transitions. This action aims to unify government messaging under the current administration.
The State Department has begun erasing the entire post history on its official X accounts, targeting content created prior to President Trump's ongoing second term. This purge extends to multiple accounts, including those managed by U.S. embassies, and encompasses posts from the Biden administration, the Obama era, and even Trump's first term.
A department spokesperson explained the rationale to NPR, stating that the move seeks "to limit confusion on U.S government policy and to speak with one voice to advance the President, Secretary, and Administration's goals and messaging. It will preserve history while promoting the present." The official further described the X platforms as "one of our most powerful tools for advancing the America First goals."
Unlike previous administrative transitions, where social media content was often preserved in accessible public archives, the removed posts here will not be publicly available. Researchers and the public must now submit FOIA requests to retrieve any of the deleted material.
This initiative fits into a broader pattern under the Trump administration, which has been systematically removing information from federal websites since taking office last year. For instance, earlier this week, the CIA discontinued its long-standing World Factbook, an online global reference resource that had been accessible since 1997.
The changes highlight ongoing efforts to align digital communications with current policy priorities, though they raise questions about historical transparency in government records.