Wednesday, February 04, 2026

Trump Tries to Spin Full Horror of His Tacky Ballroom

William Vaillancourt
Tue, February 3, 2026 
Daily Beast

Donald Trump has released a new rendering of his beloved White House ballroom - and has tried to spin the size of the monstrosity in the process.

Trump, 79, posted excitedly on Truth Social about the project that White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt admitted last year was the commander-in-chief’s “main priority.”

Trump claimed, without evidence, that presidents going back

The ballroom “replaces the very small, dilapidated, and rebuilt many times, East Wing, with a magnificent New East Wing, consisting of a glorious Ballroom that has been asked for by Presidents for over 150 years,” Trump claimed, without naming any of his predecessors.



“Being an identical height and scale, it is totally in keeping with our historic White House,” he claimed.

But the Executive Residence, according to the White House Historical Association, is 55,000 square feet. Trump’s ballroom is planned to be 90,000 square feet. The West Wing, meanwhile, is less than half the size of the ballroom: about 40,000 square feet.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the Daily Beast.


The ballroom

“This is the first rendering shown to the Public,” Trump continued. “If you notice, the North Wall is a replica of the North Facade of the White House, shown at the right hand side of the picture. This space will serve our Country well for, hopefully, Centuries into the future!”

Trump is reportedly planning on naming the ballroom after himself, just as he has been slapping his name on other Washington, D.C. buildings like the Kennedy Center, for which he just announced a “complete rebuilding.”

The ballroom, whose construction is the subject of an ongoing lawsuit by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, has an estimated cost of $400 million. That amount, which Trump revealed in December, is double its initial pricetag.


Viewed from the observation level of the Washington Monument, demolition work continues where the East Wing once stood at the White House on January 05, 2026. Trump ordered the 123-year-old East Wing and Jacqueline Kennedy Garden to be leveled to make way for a new 90,000-square-foot ballroom. / Heather Diehl / Getty ImagesMore

Donors to the controversial project, CNN reported in October, included tech giants, defense contractors, cryptocurrency investors, and media conglomerates—individuals and groups who could stand to gain from Trump’s transactional operating habits.

As part of the preservation group’s lawsuit, the National Park Service acknowledged how odd the massive ballroom would look in comparison to the rest of the grounds, which it manages.

The ballroom would “dominate the eastern portion of the site, creating a visual imbalance with the more modestly scaled West Wing and Executive Mansion,” the group said in a December court filing.

Trump’s anticipation of the ballroom hasn’t just resulted in boastful social media posts. Last month, he oddly got up from a meeting with nearly two dozen oil executives to gaze out the window at where his ballroom was set to be built.

“Wow, what a view,” he said of the construction site.


Trump says Washington has waited 200 years for the arch he wants to build. Not quite

WILL WEISSERT
Tue, February 3, 2026


Memorial Circle, the proposed plot of land near Memorial Bridge where the Independence Arch could be built is seen in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Nathan Howard)(ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Memorial Circle, the proposed plot of land near Memorial Bridge where the Independence Arch could be built is seen in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Nathan Howard)(ASSOCIATED PRESS)


WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says history is on his side.

He wants to build a towering arch near the Lincoln Memorial and argues that the nation’s capital first clamored for such a monument two centuries ago — even going so far as to erect four eagle statues as part of the project before being derailed by the attack on Fort Sumter.

“It was interrupted by a thing called the Civil War, and so it never got built,” Trump said aboard Air Force One as he flew to Florida last weekend. “Then, they almost built something in 1902, but it never happened.”

Trump’s history is off — the eagles he references are actually part of a bridge connecting Virginia and Washington that was built decades after the Civil War. The closest Washington came to an arch was a wood and plaster construction built in 1919 to mark the end of World War I — and even that was always meant to be temporary.

“For 200 years they’ve wanted to build an arc,” Trump said, meaning an arch. “They have 57 cities throughout the world that have them. We’re the only major city – Washington, D.C. – that doesn’t.”

Chandra Manning, a history professor at Georgetown University, said Washington was fledgling in the 19th century, dealing with a housing shortage, a lack of boarding houses for visitors, roads that went nowhere and an incomplete U.S. Capitol.

“Washington coming into the Civil War was still this unfinished city,” Manning said. "There’s no push for decorative memorialization in Antebellum Washington because it's still such a place that doesn’t even have all the functional buildings it needs yet.”

Trump has offered a similar historical rationale for the $400 million ballroom he demolished the White House's East Wing to begin building — arguing that officials for 150 years have wanted a large event space.

That claim, too, is dubious. While space at the White House has indeed long been an issue, there's no record of public outcry for a ballroom. Trump nonetheless is employing a similar argument to justify the arch.

“I think it will be the most beautiful in the world,” he said.

‘Biggest one of all’

The arch would stand near the Arlington Memorial Bridge, which spans the Potomac River.

Trump first unveiled the idea at an October dinner for top donors to his ballroom. Without divulging how much the arch would cost, who would pay for it or whether he'd seek approval from planning officials, the president showed off three different-sized arch models, all featuring a statue of Lady Liberty on top.

The president acknowledged then that the largest one was his favorite, and The Washington Post reported that Trump is mulling building an arch standing 250 feet (76 meters) tall. Asked about that aboard Air Force One, Trump didn't confirm the exact height he desires, but offered: “I’d like it to be the biggest one of all.”

“We’re setting up a committee, and the committee is going to be going over it," Trump said. "It’ll be substantial."

The president says he'd like the new structure to be reminiscent of the Arc de Triomphe, at the end of the Champs-Élysées in Paris, which was built to honor those who fought for France during the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars.

But that monument stands only 50 meters (164 feet) high. A 250-foot Washington arch would dwarf the Lincoln Memorial and White House, and even rival the Capitol, which stands 288 feet (88 meters).

The finished arch would be part of a building boom Trump has personally triggered, anxious to use his background as a onetime New York construction mogul to leave a lasting physical mark on the presidency.

In addition to the ballroom, Trump is closing the Kennedy Center for two years of renovations amid backlash from artists over changes he's made at the nation's premier performing arts venue. He replaced the lawn in the Rose Garden with a patio area reminiscent of his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, and redecorated the Lincoln Bathroom and Palm Room in the White House’s interior.

Trump also installed a Walk of Fame featuring portraits of past presidents along the Colonnade, massive flagpoles on the north and south lawns, and golden flourishes, cherubs and other flashy items to the substantially overhauled Oval Office.

The arch would extend the president's influence into Washington, where he has talked of beautifying “tired” grassy areas and broken signage and street medians and also deployed the National Guard to help break up homeless encampments.

Harrison Design, a local firm, is working on the project, though no construction start date has been announced. Trump wants to unveil the new structure as part of celebrations marking America’s 250th birthday.

The bridge actually came after the Civil War

Pressed on what Trump meant by the four eagles, the White House sent a photo showing eagle sculptures at the four corners of the Arlington Memorial Bridge, but no further details.

“President Trump is right. The American people for nearly 200 years have wanted an Arch in our Nation’s capital to showcase our great history," White House spokesperson Davis Ingle said in a statement. "President Trump’s bold vision will be imprinted upon the fabric of America and be felt by generations to come. His successes will continue to give the greatest Nation on earth — America — the glory it deserves.”

The president's timing is off, though.

The Arlington Memorial Bridge was first proposed in 1886, but it wasn't approved by Congress until 1925. According to the National Park Service, the bridge was conceived after the Civil War and meant to memorialize the symbolic reunification of the North and South.

It was originally built to link the site of the Lincoln Memorial with the home of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee — where Arlington National Cemetery now stands. At the time, the direction the eagles would face — right or left, meant to symbolize inward toward the city or outward facing visitors — sparked controversy.

The park service says the bridge was constructed between 1926 and 1931, and an engineer's report lists only slightly different dates — still decades after Trump's timeline.

Washington also once had a Victory Arch built near the White House in 1919, to commemorate the end of World War I. It was wood and plaster, however, and meant to be temporary. That structure was torn down in the summer of 1920.

A 2000 proposal called for a peace arch in Washington, but those plans were abandoned after the Sept. 11 attacks the following year.

Manning, who is also a former National Park Service ranger, said that, Washington aside, “I don't know of a long U.S. tradition of building arches for things."

“That sounds like an import from elsewhere to me,” she said.


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