The National Museum of the American Latino doesn't even have a building yet, but its work is already controversial. For the past two years, historians had been working on an exhibit about the history of Latino youth movements. But after pushback from conservative Latinos in the private sector and the halls of Congress, that exhibit is on hold. A new one on Latin music is being developed in its place, the Smithsonian confirmed to TIME.
The episode is part of a larger fight that will determine who gets to tell the history of Latinos in a museum dedicated to doing just that, on or near the National Mall that attracts millions of visitors each year, filing through the buildings that presume to tell the national story.
The fate of the museum itself may be at stake.
On one side are liberal historians like Johanna Fernandez and Felipe Hinojosa, two of the scholars who helped develop the paused exhibit. On the other are conservative Hispanics and Cuban American politicians like Florida Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart, who voted to defund the museum this summer. "If conservatives are serious about culture wars, they should definitely defund this museum," says Alfonso Aguilar, the president of the Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles.
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