Wednesday, July 01, 2026

'I’m sad': Trump's cuts backfire as red states forced to scrap America 250 festivities

Daniel Hampton
July 1, 2026 
RAW STORY


A supporter wearing a Make America Great Again cap attends a rally kicking off the Great American State Fair, marking the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 24, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Small towns across America wanted to throw a party for the nation's 250th birthday, but a new report found President Donald Trump's cost-cutters took away the money and funneled it toward his own beautification projects in Washington.

NOTUS reported that when DOGE axed federal funding for state humanities councils last year, local libraries and historical societies were forced to abandon plans for the semiquincentennial. The councils, created by Congress around the 1976 bicentennial to fund small-scale history and civics projects, operate in nearly every state and territory.

In Trumbull County, Ohio, even a modest "passport" project encouraging visits to history sites had to be kept small because the historical society could not afford to print more booklets. Councils in West Virginia, Alabama and Washington state were hit too.

“There’s certainly things that we could have done for America 250 if the funding was available. That just didn’t work out how we thought it could have,” Meghan Reed, the executive director of the Trumbull County Historical Society, told NOTUS.

"There's not really a lot of cultural infrastructure in West Virginia. Where most of the cultural work is done is in regional centers, community centers, small museums, county historical associations. So the people who really got hurt were those small organizations across the state," said Eric Waggoner, head of the West Virginia Humanities Council, who added of his 250th plans: "I'm sad to say we had to scrap it."

NOTUS reported that Congress funded the councils at normal levels for fiscal 2026, but the administration has disbursed less than half and told them not to expect the rest. The Federation of State Humanities Councils has asked a federal judge in Oregon to rule that Trump is violating separation-of-powers rules.

Meanwhile, Trump's Great American State Fair and his planned triumphal arch push ahead.


'Big ol' dud': Writer finds no upside when visiting Trump's Great American State Fair


Daniel Hampton
July 1, 2026 
RAW STORY




Visitors stand in the rain to watch “The Commandant's Own” U.S. Marine Drum and Bugle Corps perform during The Great American State Fair on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 28, 2026. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

President Donald Trump's Great American State Fair on the National Mall has turned into a Washington punchline, and a firsthand account in Slate found the 16-day celebration earned the ribbing.

Slate writer Molly Olmstead visited expecting to find an overlooked upside but reported the opposite, calling the fair a flop marked by thin crowds and flimsy, temporary-looking construction. She wrote that "MAHA Monday," a nod to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Make America Healthy Again movement, relied on lectures rather than entertainment. One session featured Dr. Mehmet Oz interviewed by Dean Cain, the actor who played Superman in the 1990s, before an audience Olmstead put at roughly 50 people in 87-degree heat.

"Journalists love to find surprises and unconventional angles, so I aimed to go down to the fair and find something unexpected. It seemed possible those photos were a matter of off hours or poor angles or selective omission. But no, we can confidently report that the Great American State Fair is a big ol’ dud. And nothing made that clearer than the anemic display from its 'MAHA Monday,'" wrote Olmstead.

Federal agency booths pushed a partisan message, she wrote, including an Agriculture Department display topped by a poster of Trump declaring "America is back." Several musical acts, among them Martina McBride and Young MC, had pulled out before opening day over the event's political tone.

"Trump’s Great American State Fair made no attempt to emulate the most charming elements of fairs. It instead tried, limply, to spread a Trump rally across a 1.5-mile-long fairground, with some MAHA PowerPoints thrown in. As a result, it committed one of the worst crimes possible, in the eyes of President Trump: It made MAGA look boring," Olmstead concluded.

Trump opened the fair boasting: "As you know very well, a short time ago we were a dead country. We were dead. Now we're the hottest country anywhere in the world. We're respected by everybody. Nobody's laughing at us anymore."

But the brag comes as fans were filmed walking out of his kickoff speech.

After photos showed sparse turnout and breakdowns including power outages and a buckling replica arch, he pushed back on the crowd criticism on Truth Social:

"Do you think people appreciate what a fantastic job we did in building and operating the Great American State Fair at the National Mall, packed with happy people, and everybody loving it? Ask yourself this simple question, 'DO YOU THINK THAT OBUMA OR SLEEPY JOE BIDEN COULD HAVE DONE IT?' THE ANSWER IS NO!"

Freedom 250 says more than 150,000 people have attended. The fair runs through July 10.

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