EO 14202: Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias.

Executive Order 14202 is a real public policy document. This dossier separates known facts, official claims, contested claims, open questions, civil-liberties concerns, and source trail.

Labels used in this dossier.

The strongest version of the archive is careful enough to call a document real, an official claim official, and a contested conclusion contested.

DocumentedStrongly SupportedPlausible but IncompleteContestedUnsupportedFalse / CorrectedNeeds Review

Known facts

  • EO 14202 was signed on February 6, 2025 and published in the Federal Register on February 12, 2025 as 90 FR 9365.
  • The order created a Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias within the Department of Justice.
  • The Attorney General chairs the task force; the order names multiple cabinet and agency participants.
  • The order directs reviews, outside input, recommendations, and reports at 120 days, one year, and final dissolution.
  • DOJ announced an April 30, 2026 report describing findings from seventeen federal agencies, with more than 1100 footnotes and more than 300 pages of exhibits.

Official claims

The White House and DOJ say the prior administration engaged in anti-Christian weaponization of government and that the task force documents bias across prosecutions, public health, education, employment, conscience rights, tax law, and public programs.

Those claims should be attributed to the administration unless independently corroborated by neutral records, courts, inspectors general, or primary evidence outside the task force narrative.

Contested claims

The claim of a prior government-wide war on Christians is contested. The evidence reviewed so far supports a real current apparatus and some real religious-liberty controversies, but not a settled conclusion that every cited policy dispute was a centrally directed campaign against Christians as Christians.

Open questions

  • Which claims survive agency records requests and independent review?
  • How are minority faiths, dissenting Christians, secular people, and LGBTQ communities affected by implementation?
  • Which implementation details remain unavailable without FOIA, litigation, or agency reporting?
  • Where do Free Exercise protections and Establishment Clause concerns collide?

Civil-liberties concerns.

Religious discrimination is real and should be remedied when documented. The concern in this dossier is different: whether a state apparatus built around one named religious category can remain neutral, pluralist, transparent, and protective of everyone affected by its enforcement.

The archive will watch for selective evidence, retaliation against critics, chilling effects on minority faiths and dissenting believers, policy reversals presented as neutral facts, and use of religious liberty language to narrow other civil rights without fair process.

> documented: the order and task force exist

> official claim: prior anti-Christian weaponization

> contested: government-wide war conclusion

> method: review claim by claim

Primary and balancing sources.

This list is a trailhead, not a final verdict. Readers should check publication dates, document status, and later litigation before relying on any single source.