US Trump to Sign Executive Order Making English Official U.S. Language - The U.S. has never had a national language in its nearly 250-year history

By Meridith McGraw
Feb. 28, 2025 9:00 am ET

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President Trump displayed a signed executive order in the Oval Office earlier this week. Photo: Press Pool

WASHINGTON—President Trump is planning to sign an executive order that would for the first time make English the official language of the U.S., according to White House officials.

In its nearly 250-year history, the U.S. has never had a national language at the federal level. Hundreds of languages are spoken in the U.S., the byproduct of the country’s long history of taking in immigrants from around the world.

The executive order would rescind a federal mandate issued by former President Bill Clinton that agencies and other recipients of federal funding are required to provide language assistance to non-English speakers, the officials said.

Agencies will still be able to provide documents and services in languages other than English, according to a White House summary of the order viewed by The Wall Street Journal. The summary of the order said the goal of making English the national language is to promote unity, establish efficiency in the government and provide a pathway to civic engagement.

Trump has made cracking down on illegal immigration a cornerstone of his presidency and he has promised the largest mass deportation operation in American history.

During the recent presidential campaign, Trump warned that migrants who don’t speak English were being “dropped” into communities such as Springfield, Ohio, and he raised concerns that migrant students who don’t speak English were unable to communicate in classrooms.

“We have languages coming into our country. We don’t have one instructor in our entire nation that can speak that language,” Trump said last year. “These are languages—it’s the craziest thing—they have languages that nobody in this country has ever heard of. It’s a very horrible thing.”

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Agencies will still be able to provide documents and services in languages other than English under the order, according to the White House. Photo: Yasuyoshi Chiba/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

During a 2015 presidential debate, Trump criticized former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush for speaking Spanish on the campaign trail. “This is a country where we speak English, not Spanish,” Trump said at the time.

Trump and his Republican allies spent millions during the 2024 campaign to reach out to Spanish-language speakers and other non-English speaking voters. Soon after taking office, the Trump administration took down the Spanish-language version of the White House website. The official Spanish-language social-media account on X, @LaCasaBlanca, no longer exists.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is bilingual, conducted some of his official diplomatic business with Latin American leaders in Spanish during a recent trip to the region.

Though the U.S. doesn’t have an official language, applicants must pass a test demonstrating an ability to read, write and speak English to become naturalized citizens.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, most Americans—more than 78%—speak only English at home. But millions of Americans primarily speak other languages, such as Spanish, Chinese and Tagalog. Dozens of Native American languages are also spoken in the U.S.

More than 30 states have passed legislation designating English as their official language.

Since the civil-rights movement of the 1960s, several laws have been passed to provide services or equal opportunities for non-English speaking people in the U.S. Republicans in Congress have also tried—unsuccessfully—to pass legislation making English the national language.

Vice President JD Vance introduced the English Language Unity Act when he served as a U.S. senator from Ohio. The proposed bill, co-sponsored by Sen. Kevin Cramer (R., N.D.), called for the federal government to conduct all official business in English and introduce a language-testing standard for a pathway to citizenship.

Source (Archive)
 
Good. A society cannot function with a populace that is unable to communicate clearly with one another. This is common sense.
Funnily enough this fact is actually part of what inspired the writing of Pinnocchio. At some point in Italian history certain regions could no longer understand eachother due to lack of education influencing language. Carlo Collodi took it to heart and wrote Pinnocchio as a morality tale about the dangers of not being educated and shirking work for play. Hence why when Pinnocchio shirks work and schooling he turns into a beast of burden a donkey.
 
Outstanding! Badly needed.

A common language is one thing that helps unite a country.

Got news for some...go somewhere that English isn't the official language, and expect government forms to be in English - don't be surprised if they aren't. Doesn't mean you won't get help but by the same token we need not bend over to accommodate non-English speakers at every turn. Want to live here? Learn English, least at a basic level. No excuse.
 
Being an official language just means that all government business has to be done in that language.
Yeah....about that....
Agencies will still be able to provide documents and services in languages other than English, according to a White House summary of the order viewed by The Wall Street Journal.
 
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Outstanding! Badly needed.

A common language is one thing that helps unite a country.

Got news for some...go somewhere that English isn't the official language, and expect government forms to be in English - don't be surprised if they aren't. Doesn't mean you won't get help but by the same token we need not bend over to accommodate non-English speakers at every turn. Want to live here? Learn English, least at a basic level. No excuse.
Damn right.

I lived in a non-Anglophone country for 12 years, learned the language and functioned in it. If you can't be arsed to learn even the local tongue, don't be there; it's profoundly arrogant and disrespectful.

If toilets were sentient, I doubt they would agree a few hours later
You haven't yet become aware of the "human toilet" fetish, have you? And you call yourself a Kiwi?

Agencies will still be able to provide documents and services in languages other than English, according to a White House summary of the order viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Ah, but not required. That would seem to be the good bit.
 
Believe one of the biggest examples of a country with more than one official language having a problem with it is Canada. Quebec insists on French, but English makes bigger and bigger inroads there all the time. In the end, like it or not in Quebec, English will win out over French.

In Europe, Belgium and Switzerland have more than one official language, but due to the size, the relative homogenity, and the relative sophistication of the population doesn't seem to be much of a problem.
 
It’s common sense. I would like to see official recognition for federal stuff for Spanish in the Southwest, French in Louisiana and German in Pennsylvania, though.
 
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But millions of Americans primarily speak other languages, such as Spanish, Chinese and Tagalog. Dozens of Native American languages are also spoken in the US
No one cares what these people speak at home. We just don’t want for example our kids rendered unable to learn in school because a bunch of foreign kids who don’t speak any English and never even really went to school before are taking up all the time energy and $$.
 
This will literally change nothing. Everything official is already in English. You're not going to stop spanish speakers living in their enclaves from not learning english through this executive action, unfortunately.

If the only change is that he signed a piece of paper saying that English is the official language, but we still have to make documents in other languages because migrants don't understand english, then nothing of substance actually changed.
 
I support this for no other reason than it'll finally shut up the insufferable pedants on Reddit who bring up this fact. "But the US has no official language! That means it's perfectly fine if you live here without being able to communicate with the vast majority of the population!".
 
But what about Niggerspeak? Bixnood dindu mufugen counts as English?
 
This will literally change nothing. Everything official is already in English. You're not going to stop spanish speakers living in their enclaves from not learning english through this executive action, unfortunately.

If the only change is that he signed a piece of paper saying that English is the official language, but we still have to make documents in other languages because migrants don't understand english, then nothing of substance actually changed.
What if, now that English is our official language, we set up a government department, akin to France's General Delegation for the French language?

Now we can regulate it. We can say, "The English word, "Woman," means "An adult human female." That's law now. Every single legal entity in the US would then have to use the word to mean that in all written law. No more judges being like "well what a woman is depends on the context of the situation," for example. If they wanted something to include trannies or genderblobs, the law would have to be explicit about that.

The language of the law would become less ambiguous, allowing for less and less of the typical lefty fuckery of trying to redefine words in order to change the law. Most laws go out of their way to define things that they are primarily concerned with, but this would make it so that common language is also defined.
 
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