As Trump Pushes English-Only, New Polling Shows Families Embrace Bilingualism
Nearly 95% of non-English-speaking 鈥 and 55% of English-speaking 鈥 families say it鈥檚 important for their child to grow up speaking multiple languages.
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So much of the Trump administration feels unprecedented 鈥擴.S. immigration agents using in Minneapolis, mobilized in communities across the country; comprehensive efforts to deny taxpaying immigrant families access 鈥 that it鈥檚 possible to miss when its behavior is actually reanimating old U.S. traditions.
For example, as dramatic as the Trump administration鈥檚 demolition of the U.S. Department of Education feels 鈥 this simply delivers on a core, decades-old Republican Party , one the GOP only really suspended from 2000 to 2008.
The administration鈥檚 sustained in government programs, society and schools is another of those throwback moves. It might feel new, it might feel unthinkable in a country like ours, one with an exceptional history of linguistic diversity 鈥 from German-language to Univisi贸n and , to polyglot sports stars and and . But the current crusade against America鈥檚 many non-English languages is actually another atavistic revival of a longstanding conservative project.
While this monolingual project has found periodic success in the past, the administration鈥檚 position occupies surprisingly unpopular turf in the present. from families of school-aged kids suggest that this move runs counter to Americans鈥 current views on multilingualism 鈥 particularly in U.S. schools.

Polling and focus group data from I published at The Century Foundation suggest that Trump鈥檚 English-only agenda is unpopular. My co-authors and I conducted a half-dozen focus groups in English and in Spanish with 64 Latino families across California 鈥 and used the results to construct a survey that we administered to a diverse group of 1,000 families in the state.
We found overwhelming family interest in bilingualism. Fully 94% of families that speak a non-English language at home said that it was 鈥渧ery鈥 or 鈥渆xtremely鈥 important that their child grow up speaking multiple languages. Perhaps more surprisingly, 55% of monolingual English-speaking families agreed.
Bilingualism isn鈥檛 just popular as a value or a possible set of skills for children. Families we spoke with made it clear that they鈥檙e enthusiastic about enrolling their children in bilingual or dual language K鈥12 programs. Nearly two-thirds of families speaking a non-English language at home 鈥渟trongly鈥 agreed that it was helpful to have their children learning two languages at school, and another 30% 鈥渟omewhat鈥 agreed.
Further, when we asked respondents to rank their interest in bilingual education programs on a scale of one to 10, their average rating was a 7.9. More than three-quarters of respondents ranked their interest in bilingual education at seven or higher. Latino families showed similar levels of interest, with 40% rating their interest in bilingual education as 10 out of 10.


We focused on California families for this study because it, along with Massachusetts and Arizona, hosted a surge of English-only political crusading just a few decades ago. Around the turn of this century, conservatives fought to ban bilingual education and establish English as the 鈥溾 in their and across the broader country. The organizations, like , carrying this 鈥淓nglish-Only鈥 banner were overt in linking their war on multilingualism to an anti-immigrant, anti-multicultural agenda.
A few years earlier, while running for president in 1995, , “With all the divisive forces tearing at our country, we need the glue of language to help hold us together. If we want to ensure that all our children have the same opportunities in life, alternative language education should stop and English should be acknowledged once and for all as the official language of the United States.”
Many of these 1990s vintage, English-only policies have been by legislation or by voters in state referenda, but the Trump administration breathed new life into them in 2025. Last March, the president signed designating English as the official language of the United States and rescinding non-binding guidance on when federal agencies should provide services in multiple languages. In July, the administration released discouraging federal agencies from offering translation services and instructing them to 鈥減rioritize English.鈥
If this feels negligible 鈥 a minor issue far too insignificant to be politically salient 鈥 consider that attacks on multilingualism are (inevitably) attacks on highly popular education programs like dual language immersion schools. The administration鈥檚 aggressive detention and deportation campaign is already reducing the daily linguistic diversity of U.S. schools by for of and English learners.
Should it continue, will shrink the country鈥檚 multilingual student population. Not only are linguistically diverse English learners to , they鈥檝e been buttressing school enrollment levels in .
Put another way: our data indicate that Trump鈥檚 immigration agenda may somehow have even more room to fall as it erodes the multilingual vision of American society that people like.
Many have soured on harsh detention policies that are , and/or law-abiding community members and . Opposition to these policies will only grow as the administration鈥檚 ugly treatment of immigrants begins harming the schools of more families 鈥 whatever languages they speak at home.
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