Trump withdraws US from UN forum accused of promoting racial bias
President Trump has taken a bold stand against what his administration sees as a dangerous overreach by a United Nations body.
The decision, formalized through an executive order on Wednesday, pulls the US out of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, which State Department officials argue has been advancing unconstitutional and racially divisive policies, the New York Post reported.
Officials in the Trump administration contend that this forum has been peddling ideas rooted in racial grievances rather than equality. They point to its advocacy for policies that clash directly with the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.
Standing Firm Against Divisive Agendas
The State Department has made its frustration clear, with principal spokesman Tommy Pigott declaring, “America will no longer lend its credibility to racist organizations.” If you dig into that statement, it’s a sharp rebuke of a forum that seems more interested in stoking division than fostering unity.
Pigott didn’t stop there, adding, “Radical activists who embrace DEI ideology and seek to compel the United States to adopt policies mandating race-based wealth redistribution… will no longer be entertained.” That’s a direct shot at the notion of forcing Americans to foot the bill for historical wrongs through coercive global mandates.
The forum’s push for a “global reparations agenda” to address legacies of colonialism and enslavement has been a sticking point. Trump’s team argues that such policies aren’t just impractical; they’re a deliberate attempt to undermine national sovereignty.
Reparations and Beyond: A Troubling Scope
This UN body hasn’t limited its focus to reparations for historical injustices spanning the 16th to 19th centuries. Its agenda also weaves in demands for “racial equity” in areas like climate action, claiming environmental justice hinges on addressing past structural wrongs.
Even emerging fields like artificial intelligence have been dragged into the forum’s framework. They’ve insisted that only “reparatory justice” can prevent what they call “technology-enabled racism,” a concept that raises eyebrows for its vagueness and overreach.
These positions, according to the administration, aren’t grounded in practical solutions or fairness. They appear designed to guilt-trip nations into compliance rather than encourage genuine dialogue or progress.
Questionable Representation on the Forum
One figure tied to this UN group, Justin Hansford, a Howard University law professor, has drawn particular scrutiny. As the only US-based member since joining in March 2022, his outspoken views add fuel to the administration’s concerns.
Hansford has publicly supported abolishing police departments and endorsed the Black Lives Matter movement. He’s also advocated for a UN tribunal to force the US into paying $5 million in reparations to black Americans, a proposal that many see as wildly detached from reality.
These stances don’t exactly scream impartiality or a commitment to constitutional principles. They suggest an agenda more aligned with ideological crusades than balanced governance.
America’s Line in the Sand
By withdrawing from this forum, Trump’s administration signals a refusal to play along with what they view as a rigged game. It’s a move to protect American values from being eroded by international bodies with questionable priorities.
This executive order isn’t about ignoring history or dismissing legitimate grievances. It’s about rejecting a framework that prioritizes division over unity and coercion over cooperation.
The message from Washington is clear: the US won’t be strong-armed into policies that violate its foundational laws. If the UN wants American support, it’ll need to rethink its approach to fairness and stop pushing agendas that alienate rather than reconcile.



