Monday, December 22, 2025

TRUMPENOMICS TOO

Iconic American Bourbon Brand is Shuttering its Trademark Distillery in 2026


Men's Journal · Photo by Adam Bouse on Unsplash

Alex Reimer
Sun, December 21, 2025 
Men's Journal 

Jim Beam is putting its trademark distillery on ice.

The iconic American bourbon brand announced it will stop producing whiskey at its facility in Clermont, Kentucky on January 1. The pause will last for the entirety of 2026.

“We are always assessing production levels to best meet consumer demand and recently met with our team to discuss our volumes for 2026," the company said in a statement, per the Lexington Herald Leader. “We’ve shared with our teams that while we will continue to distill at our (Freddie Booker Noe) craft distillery in Clermont and at our larger Booker Noe distillery in Boston, we plan to pause distillation at our main distillery on the James B. Beam campus for 2026 while we take the opportunity to invest in site enhancements."

The visitor center for those who pass through on the famed Kentucky Bourbon Trail.

Why is Jim Beam Stopping Production?


It's been a rough year for Kentucky's $9 billion whiskey industry. Tariffs and boycotts are hitting business hard: Canada hasn't bought any American-manufactured spirits since March in response to President Donald Trump's ongoing tariff regime. Overall, U.S. whiskey sales to Canada are down 60%.

As a result, the bourbon industry has halted production by more than 55 million proof-gallons, representing a 28% downshift.

Though the Jim Beam's main distillery is shuttering operations for next year, layoffs haven't been announced--at least not yet. Jim Beam employs nearly 1,500 people in Kentucky.

Other whiskey companies, such as Jack Daniel's, have laid off employees as they pause production, too.

What's the Reaction?


Whiskey enthusiasts and concerned consumers are placing blame on Trump's tariffs. Canada is a major export market for American spirits, serving as the second-largest behind the European Union.

"Trump’s tariffs hurt Kentucky. There is no doubt about it," posted Kentucky Democratic Senate candidate Amy McGrath.

Though there is an apparent link between the bourbon industry slump and tariffs, it's worth noting that Kentucky bourbon sales started to slow down in 2024. Alcohol consumption across the U.S. is on the down swing: the percentage of U.S. adults who say they consume alcohol has dropped to 54%, the lowest percentage in Gallup's 90-year history.


Why Jack Daniel's parent Brown-Forman is reporting lower sales, profit



Olivia Evans and Matthew Glowicki, Louisville Courier Journal
December 4, 2025 3 min read


Brown-Forman, the maker of iconic whiskey products such as Jack Daniel's Tennessee Whiskey and Woodford Reserve, continues to see decreased sales and profits largely attributed to the trade environment and lower used barrel sales.

The first half of fiscal 2026 which ended Oct. 31, saw Brown-Forman report a 4% decrease in net sales and a 4% decrease in gross profit, the company shared in its earnings report Dec. 4.


"We believe cyclical pressures related to ongoing macro, economic and geopolitical uncertainties continued to negatively impact consumer confidence and reduce discretionary spending in the U.S. and in many developed international markets," Brown-Forman President and CEO Lawson Whiting said Dec. 4. "On the other hand, we continue to see resilient consumers in a number of our emerging international markets, where trends are generally much stronger."

The spirits maker, which closed its Louisville cooperage in April and laid off 12% of its global staff in 2025, saw a decline in its 2025 fiscal year sales, has repeatedly spoken about the impact of tariffs and trade on its products. It noted that while its net sales have shown a decline in the first half of fiscal year 2026, it remains optimistic about growth in emerging international markets and its ability to innovate new products like its recent launch of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Blackberry.


"We continue to navigate a spirit sector facing headwinds and still expect that the behavior of the consumer and the level of trade inventories will not change meaningfully during the 2026 fiscal year," said Leanne Cunningham, executive vice president and chief financial officer at Brown‑Forman.

The company reported its entire whiskey portfolio was neutral ― seeing no growth or loss for the earnings period. Brown-Forman also reported its ready-to-drink products saw 5% growth in the first half of FY26, tequila was down 3% and the rest of the company's portfolio fell 35% in net sales.

Whiting said that while the company experienced notable declines, it's important to note the performance "in developed international markets and the U.S. sequentially improved" when compared to the first quarter.


While Brown-Forman continues to feel drastic effects of many provinces in Canada removing all U.S.-made products from shelves in response to President Donald Trump's tariffs and Europe becoming a more challenging operating environment, the alcohol producer saw strong growth in countries like Mexico, Turkey and Brazil.

Whiting said the company has taken a 60% hit in Canada organic net sales.


"The continued unavailability of American spirits products in Canada resulted in a significant impact to our top line performance," Cunningham said. "While we are hopeful for the return of American products to Canadian store shelves, we continue to assume this headwind will persist for our full fiscal year."


In addition to Canada driving sales down, the other main headwind at play for Brown-Forman is used barrel sales.

"Used barrel sales have returned to levels that reflect the challenging and uncertain operating environment for the spirits industry," Cunningham said. "We continue to expect used barrel sales to be lower by more than half of fiscal 2025 level."

Contact business reporter Olivia Evans at oevans@courier-journal.com or on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter at @oliviamevans_. Reach growth and development reporter Matthew Glowicki at mglowicki@courier-journal.com or 502-582-4000.

This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Jack Daniel's parent Brown-

Jack Daniel’s owner sees Canada sales plunge 62% amid boycott of US booze

A view of the atmosphere is seen during Masego headlines Jack Daniel's "Carols By The Barrels" concert event in Los Angeles at The Brig on December 10, 2024 in Venice, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Jack Daniel's) · Food Dive · Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Jack Daniel's via Getty Images


Laurel Deppen

December 10, 2025 


This story was originally published on Food Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Food Dive newsletter.

Spirits giant Brown-Forman said the ongoing Canadian boycott of U.S. alcohol spurred by President Donald Trump's tariff policies continues to drag down earnings, with sales in the country declining 62% in the second quarter.


While Canada only makes up about 1% of Brown-Forman’s total sales, the continued absence of its products from a bulk of the country's stores is impacting its entire top line. Total net sales for the quarter fell 5% year over year to $1 billion.

The drop off also impacted the company’s ready-to-drink Jack Daniel’s portfolio, which fell 4% in the first half of its fiscal year.

As Canadian consumers protest Trump's tariffs, only two provinces continue to sell alcohol from the United States, according to the BBC. A majority have pulled stock from the shelves in a bid to promote Canada-produced goods, though some provinces have moved to sell their remaining U.S. inventory to raise funds for charity.

Growth of Brown-Forman's Diplomático and the Glendronach, which are produced outside of the U.S., wasn’t enough to offset the declines elsewhere, executives said in an earnings call last week.

"The continued unavailability of American spirits products in Canada resulted in a significant impact to our top line performance," CFO Leanne Cunningham said on an earnings call. "While we are hopeful for the return of American products to Canadian store shelves, we continue to assume this headwind will persist."

The company expects its full-year net sales to decline in a low-single digit range.

In March, Brown-Forman CEO Lawson Whiting said Canadian retailers pulling U.S. alcohol from stores was worse than a tariff.

Dan Su, equity analyst for Morningstar Research Services, said that earnings calls at several Canada-based grocery stores seem to indicate that the anti-U.S. sentiment among Canadian consumers has eased significantly, which could pave the way for Brown Forman's return in the country.

“It seems to me the friction between the two countries on the tariff subject has eased off in recent months, and hopefully the retailers [and] smaller liquor stores will put Brown-Forman products back on the shelf,” Su said in an interview. “But it’s probably going to take a couple of quarters, and within this time period, that will continue to be a headwind for the company.”

Canada is figuring out what to do with its stockpiles of US alcohol

Katherine Li,Aditi Bharade

December 12, 2025 


Canadian provinces removed American liquor from store shelves earlier this year.Jennifer Gauthier/REUTERS

Most Canadian provinces pulled US booze off their shelves in March to protest Trump's tariffs.

Now, some are selling their stockpiles to raise money for food banks and charities ahead of the holidays.

Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland are four such provinces.

Canada is coming up with ways to put its stockpiled American liquor to good use.


Several provinces in the country halted imports of US booze and removed it from store shelves in March in response to President Donald Trump's tariffs.

Now, at least four provinces are planning to sell the remaining inventory and donate proceeds to food banks.

Canada's far eastern province, Prince Edward Island, told Business Insider that its government will put its stock of American booze, which it had pulled off the shelves, back in stores starting on December 11.

A representative for the province's finance department said the government anticipates profits of $600,000 Canadian dollars, or about $434,000, from the sale. The proceeds will be distributed to food banks across the island. The province says it does not intend to place any further orders for American alcohol.


The finance office of Newfoundland and Labrador told Business Insider it had made an upfront payment of $500,000 on Tuesday to 60 provincial food banks before the sales of any liquors, a move that will help more than 15,400 people. After the liquor is sold, more donations will go to the food banks for a total sum of up to $1 million.

Manitoba and Nova Scotia have similar plans.

Manitoba said it will sell its inventory through private retailers and restaurants, with the estimated $500,000 in net revenue going to food banks, holiday charities, children's organizations, and an advocacy group for First Nations.

As for Nova Scotia, the province is making a $4 million upfront payment to groups that provide food access, and the money will be recouped when the $14 million worth of liquor is eventually sold.


"We will not be ordering any more from the United States once this inventory is gone," the province's premier, Tim Houston, said in a statement. "But Nova Scotians have already paid for this product."

He added, "We don't want it to go to waste. That's why we're selling it and using the proceeds to help those in need."

In Canada, the sale of alcohol is mainly controlled by provincial governments, each of which establishes a board to oversee the matter. Only Alberta has a completely privatized alcohol retail system, while Saskatchewan has a partially privatized system.


Canada mainly imports whiskey and bourbon, alongside beer and other spirits, from the US.
Other provinces have different plans

The provinces are not taking a one-size-fits-all approach to dealing with their stockpiles of American booze. Some are still undecided about what to do, while others have already sold off their inventory earlier in the year after ceasing imports.

A spokesperson for Ontario's finance ministry told Business Insider that the province had no plans to put the booze on store shelves soon.


"US alcohol will remain off shelves and is being held in storage until further notice," said the spokesperson. "We are currently exploring options for the products."

Ontario did not disclose how much inventory it still has, but the province said the inventory it had pulled off the shelves in March was worth around C$80 million.

A government representative from the Northwest Territories and a spokesperson of the British Columbia Liquor Distribution Branch both told Business Insider that they ceased US liquor imports in March, but will continue selling the stockpiled products until they are depleted.

A Yukon government cabinet representative said Yukon has the same plan.

However, the mountainous province of Alberta continues to import and sell American booze.


"In June this year, Alberta lifted restrictions on the purchase of US alcohol from American companies, signalling a renewed commitment to open and fair trade with our largest partner," a spokesperson of Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction told Business Insider.
American distillers are hurting

The matter of US booze has been fueling the trade tension between the two neighbors.

The animosity started when Trump imposed a 25% tariff on Canada in March and commented that Canada should become a state of the US.

Despite later walking back some of his broader tariffs and upholding a previous agreement that ensured most goods remain tariff-free, Trump's moves have drawn the ire of Canadians, who have canceled travel plans and boycotted American goods in stores.


According to the Distilled Spirits Council, US spirits exports to Canada plummeted 85% in the second quarter of 2025, falling below $10 million in export value.

"We hope both the US and Canada can address their respective concerns," said Chris Swonger, the CEO of the council. "And that our products can return to Canadian retail shelves as soon as possible."

In March, Kentucky's bourbon makers said Canada's ban on American alcohol would hurt them.

Eric Gregory, the president of the Kentucky Distillers' Association, said in March that retaliatory tariffs would have "far-reaching consequences across Kentucky, home to 95% of the world's bourbon."


Beloved beer brand and brewery shuts down, no bankruptcy




Kirk O’Neil
Updated Tue, December 16, 2025 


The craft beer industry has suffered a devastating year in 2025, as over 250 breweries in the U.S. closed down permanently in the first six months of the year.

Most craft breweries blamed rising costs, slowing taproom traffic, and fierce retail competition as the reasons for their demise, American Craft Beer reported.


The number of craft breweries operating in the U.S. declined from 9,747 in 2023 to 9,269 in June 2025, the Brewers Association reported, and the number continues to decline.
Craft breweries file for bankruptcy and liquidate


Several craft brewers have liquidated and closed in Chapter 7 this year, including St. Petersburg, Fla.-based brewery Dissent Craft Brewing, which filed for liquidation in August; Exton, Pa.-based Iron Hill Brewery LLC and San Jose, Calif.-based Strike Brewing Company, which both filed petitions in October; and Oregon-based Rogue Ales & Spirits, which filed Chapter 7 in November.

One of the most prominent craft brewery closings was Albuquerque, N.M.-based Bosque Brewing Company, which filed for Chapter 11 protection in October 2025 and closed two of its 11 New Mexico establishments in December.

Entropy Brewing Co. closes down its business after almost a year and a half of operating.Shutterstock

Entropy Brewing Company closes permanently


And now, popular Ohio beer brand and brewery Entropy Brewing Company posted on social media that it will not make it to New Year's Eve as it closes down its business permanently on Dec. 27, 2025.

The Miamisburg, Ohio, craft brewery, restaurant, and bar revealed in a Dec. 12 Facebook post that it will shut down operations on Dec. 27, but did not state a reason for closing.


"We have an important update to share: Entropy Brewing Co. will be closing on December 27, 2025. We are deeply grateful for the incredible support this community has shown us. Thank you for the memories, the laughter, and the many good times shared here," the brewery said in the Facebook post.

"Many of us have developed great friendships with many of you. Please visit and say goodbye. Cheers!" the message concluded.
Entropy Brewing opened in July 2025 in a historic building

Entropy Brewing Co. opened for business on July 3, 2024, in a historic 125-year-old downtown Miamisburg building that was built in 1900 to house Suttman's Men's and Boy's Wear, which itself shut down in 2013, according to the Dayton Daily News.

The fledgling craft brewery, which described itself as "a multi-generational brew pub for the whole family," included an indoor playground for children 2-10 years old in an adjacent building where the brew pub's kitchen is located.

The brewery featured a taproom on the main floor and a speakeasy lounge and cocktail bar in the basement. The second and third floors housed one- and two-bedroom apartments.

More closings:

Casual Mexican restaurant chain closes more locations


79-year-old national trucking company closes down, no bankruptcy


65-year-old Home Depot rival shutters business permanently

Entropy Brewery's beers on tap include Bleacher Talk blonde ale, Dark Matter oatmeal stout, 635nm red ale, Vin & Aether aged saison, Viking Project hazy IPA, Phase Change mild coffee ale, Peach Nebula session black dark lager, Chocolate Coal session dark lager, The Black Hole Hallertauer blanc forward black lager, and Pumpkin Project hazy IPA.

Entropy Brewery's beers:

Bleacher Talk blonde ale


Dark Matter oatmeal stout


635nm red ale


Vin & Aether aged saison


Viking Project hazy IPA


Phase Change mild coffee ale


Peach Nebula session black dark lager


Chocolate Coal session dark lager


The Black Hole Hallertauer blanc forward black lager


Pumpkin Project hazy IPA.

The brew pub's dining menu includes a variety of steak burgers, sandwiches, tacos, mac and cheese, salads, starters, dips, and a kids' menu.

The brewery also rented out spaces for parties and special events, including the Stuttman Room, Lower the Bar, Main Dining Area, Outdoor Patio, and the whole Entropy Building with 200 seating capacity.

Related: Bankrupt beer and pizza restaurant chain closes locations

This story was originally published by TheStreet on Dec 14, 2025, where it first appeared in the Restaurants section. A

AB InBev to shut two US breweries, sell another

https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/hephzibah-ga-usa-06-15-23-2318947385 Budweiser and Bud Light on sale in Hephzibah · Just Drinks


Dean Best

December 12, 2025 

Anheuser-Busch InBev is to close two breweries in the US and offload another.

The Budweiser brewer said the changes mean it can “invest even more in our remaining operations”.

AB InBev is shutting facilities in Fairfield in California and in Merrimack in New Hampshire.

Meanwhile, the world’s largest beer maker is selling a brewery in Newark in New Jersey to property business Goodman Group.



Around 475 staff are affected. A spokesperson for the Michelob Ultra owner said it would offer all the employees “a full-time role elsewhere in our US operations”.

The spokesperson said AB InBev would move “production from these three facilities to our other US facilities” and added: “These changes will enable us to invest even more in our remaining operations and in our portfolio of growing, industry-leading brands.”


In the first nine months of 2025, AB InBev’s revenue in the US declined 1.2%. Sales to retailers fell 3.1% while sales to wholesalers slid 3%. EBITDA inched up 1.1%.

In 2024, the Bud Light brewer reported a 2% fall in US revenues, with sales to retailers decreasing 5% and sales to wholesalers falling 3.9%.


The spokesperson pointed to AB InBev’s recent investment at other breweries in the US. This year, the company has announced projects including at sites in Georgia and New York.

Last week, AB InBev announced a deal to acquire a majority stake in BeatBox, the US-based hard-punch maker.

AB InBev will pay up to around $490m for an 85% shareholding in BeatBox.

Texas-based BeatBox sells its products across the US. Its portfolio spans 20 SKUs, including Blue Razzberry, Orange Blast, Mystic Grape, Lemon Squeeze and Sweet Heat Cinnamon.

The brand entered the UK in October through a distribution agreement with Red Star Brands, securing listings in 700 Morrisons stores.

"AB InBev to shut two US breweries, sell another" was originally created and published by Just Drinks, a GlobalData owned brand.


Anheuser-Busch to shutter its Merrimack facility in early 2026

Jonathan Phelps, 
The New Hampshire Union Leader, Manchester
December 11, 2025


Anheuser-Busch will shutter its brewery operations in Merrimack early next year along with facilities in California and New Jersey.

The company known for its Budweiser products confirmed the closing Thursday morning, but has not filed any paperwork under the federal WARN Act, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.


Merrimack officials were told about 125 workers at the plant will be given options to relocate or take a severance package.

The shutdown puts an end to more than 50 years of “The King of Beers” being brewed at the more than 400,000-square-foot processing facility at 221 Daniel Webster Highway. The property also includes warehouses, office buildings, and its well-known biergarten.

Merrimack Town Manager Paul Micali received a call from an Anheuser-Busch representative Thursday morning who told him about the plant closing.

“It is a surprise that they are closing so quickly,” he said. “I knew there were talks about the facility, but I didn’t think they were going to close within four months, three months.”

In addition to the Merrimack plant, the company will also close a facility in Fairfield, California, and sell another in Newark, New Jersey, to the Goodman Group. Approximately 475 full-time employees across all three plants will be impacted, according to a company spokesperson.


All full-time employees will be offered roles in other facilities within the company’s U.S. operations with relocation stipends and new location skills training. Employees who choose not to relocate will be provided with severance packages and other resources, the company said.

The company has been making changes over the past five years to “update and modernize” its U.S. manufacturing operation, including investing $2 billion in more than 100 facilities across the country.

“We will be shifting production from these three facilities to our other U.S. facilities and these changes will enable us to invest even more in our remaining operations and in our portfolio of growing, industry-leading brands,” a company spokesperson said.

Anheuser-Busch earlier this year announced it would stop the production of craft beer in Portsmouth. The production space at Pease International Tradeport opened as Redhook Brewery in 1996.


Michael Skelton, Business and Industry Association president and CEO, called the news disappointing as he said Anheuser-Busch was a great employer and community partner over the years.

“I’m sure this is part of a long-range continual assessment of the best deployment of resources,” he said. “Unfortunately, we’re not immune to those decisions despite the state, I think, offering a very competitive environment for companies like this in terms of our regulatory environment and quality of our workforce.”


Senate President Sharon Carson, R-Londonderry, called Anheuser-Busch a “cornerstone” for the state’s manufacturing sector.

“During this time, it has played a vital role in our local economy, not only through job creation and tax revenue but also through its contributions to community outreach and charitable efforts. I want to thank them for making New Hampshire their home,” she said in a statement.


Department of Business and Economic Affairs Office Interim Director James Key-Wallace said his department will reach out to Anheuser-Busch to see how the state can offer assistance to the impacted workers.

“We are here to support Granite Staters impacted by Anheuser-Busch’s closure of its facility in Merrimack,” he said.

The Merrimack plant opened in 1970 and celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2020.

Tours were also popular at the plant, with reports of up to 100,000 visitors a year in its heyday.

But much of the allure diminished when the company announced in 2018 it would relocate its Budweiser Clydesdales training facility to Missouri. Clydesdales were supposed to remain at the Clydesdale Hamlet in Merrimack when they weren’t on tour, but that did not end up being the case.


The same year, the company completed an $11 million project to increase the facility’s cross-brewing capabilities.

Some of the well-known events every year include Oktoberfest, Ribfest and concerts. The organizers of the NH PoutineFest said they’ve been receiving a lot of messages since the closure was announced.

“Very sad news to us,” the group wrote on Facebook. “The staff at AB has become part of our family in many ways. At this time we are going to focus on supporting our friends.”

Skelton said once the initial shock wears off conversations can begin on how the property will be redeveloped.

Micali, the Merrimack town manager, said the town’s wastewater system was built around the facility, which is at little less than half the system’s flow, which amounts to between $1 million or $1.5 million in sewer revenues.

Property taxes from the site typically come in around $800,000 a year.

He called the plant an institution.

“Everybody knows someone who’s worked there, or their grandfather worked there, or somebody worked there in the past,” he said.

Anheuser Busch is owned by Anheuser Busch InBev, a Belgian multinational beverage and brewing company.


Economic Stress Has Americans Shifting from High-End Booze to Cheaper Bottles

Sarina Trangle
December 14, 2025
 Investopedia


Kevin Carter / Getty ImagesDon Julio and other high-end tequila sales have softened, Diageo PLC said.


Key Takeaways

Sales of spirits that cost $100 or more have plunged, and consumers are shifting from "super premium" to "premium" tequila, liquor-company executives said.


The business leaders said people "trading down" shows that Americans still want to buy and drink alcohol.


Fewer booze buyers are reaching for the top shelf.


Americans aren't thirsting for for the high-end tequila that once flowed freely, spirits companies said, as demand for $100 spirits has dropped off. Consumers appear to be trading down—or selecting less expensive versions of their preferred beverage—said Lawson Whiting, CEO of Brown-Forman (BF.A, BF.B), on Thursday, as sales of more affordable bottles fell less.

“We are seeing some weakening, for the first time, in terms of trade down,” Whiting said on a conference call, according to a transcript made available by AlphaSense. "When you look at $100 and above or $50-to-$100 [segments], those price points have weakened considerably."

Industrywide, the number of $100-plus bottles sold has fallen 18% in the past three months, according to the market research firm NielsenIQ.

Why This News Matters to Investors

Consumers are trying to cut back on booze amid concerns about the job market and inflation. Many are likely to step back first from discretionary items, such as fancy liquor or meals out.

Diageo, which makes Johnnie Walker and Crown Royal, said sales of its "super premium" tequila brands have weakened, including Don Julio, which can cost as much as $470 for a 750-ml bottle of Ultima Reserva, as well as Casamigos, which retails for $40 to $62, according to Total Wine & More quotes for New York.

Some customers are shifting to Astral, a "premium" alternative that Total Wine sells for $32, Diageo's interim CFO Deirdre Mahlan said, explaining that the tequila category has also grown competitive as the spirit exploded in recent years.

The spirits companies offer a sign that consumers are cutting back on alcohol because of the economy, rather than in response to health concerns and changing norms, which are also reconfiguring consumption and spending in the sector.

Research shows younger Americans drink less than prior generations. Several factors may be at play: health and wellness is a bigger priority; some socializing has moved online; and disposable income is tight. Legal cannabis may also rival its appeal, and many are now buying non-alcoholic spirits and beers. But some companies believe money is at the root of the change.

"It's largely economic," Mahlan said last month, according to a transcript. "Look at the changes that we're seeing in terms of trade down both in formats and price points."

This article has been updated since it was first published to clarify the industry data from NielsenIQ.


TRUMPENOMICS
U.S. BBQ chain closes half its restaurants, files Chapter 11

Daniel Kline
Sat, December 20, 2025

Rising meat prices have wreaked havoc on the barbecue space.

Many restaurants have the option of leaning more heavily on fish or chicken, maybe even pastas and vegetarian options, when meat prices climb. That's not something barbecue eateries can do because while they may serve chicken and fish, beef and pork are the stars of the show.

Omaha Steaks CEO Nate Rempe said the nation’s shrinking cattle supply and record demand are driving a "$10-per-pound reality" that could stretch family budgets for years.

"We are headed for what I'm calling…the $10-a-pound reality. By [the] third quarter of '26, families are gonna see $10 a pound [for] ground beef in the grocery store. So we're in for a bit of a haul here," Omaha Steaks’ CEO Nate Rempe told Fox Business. "I don't believe we'll see price[s] come down in any meaningful way until sometime in 2027."

Ground beef did not reach those levels, but beef prices are up.

The FAO Food Price Index, which serves as a global benchmark for food commodity prices, averaged 130.1 points in July, a 1.6% increase from June, FAO said.

FAO's meat price index hit a new all-time high of 127.3 points, up 1.2% from its previous peak in June, as strong import demand from China and the United States boosted beef and sheep meat prices, the agency said.

"U.S. beef imports have climbed after drought led to a decline in the domestic cattle herd. China shipped in record amounts of beef last year amid growing popularity of the meat," Reuters reported.

Bureau of Labor Statistics reports show rising beef prices as well.

"Drastically declining cattle inventories have made ground beef retail prices in the U.S. 13% dearer August 2025 than a year back," according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report. "By August, prices of steak and minced beef had surged by 16.6% and 12.8%, respectively, year-on-year (YoY)."

Some experts think the worst is yet to come.

“As high as prices are, I still think the risk is for prices to go up instead of down,” Michael Irgang, president and owner of Global Risk Management, a firm specializing in commodity risk management for the food and agribusiness industries, told Meat and Poultry. “It’s a perfect storm of a bunch of different things coming together at the exact same time.”

That adds to the woes of barbecue chains already facing struggling consumers, increased labor costs, and an overall challenging operating market. Taken together, all of these issues have factored in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing from Smoke Ring, LLC, which operates restaurants under the Ray Ray’s, Ray Ray’s Hog Pit, and Ray Ray’s Ohio Style brand names.

Smoke Rings/Ray Ray's file Chapter 11 bankruptcy

Ray Ray's first opened in 2009. The company shared its philosophy on its website.

"What makes us different is our love for American barbecue traditions and how we combine that old-school smoke with new-school magic. From the beginning, our approach has attracted dedicated barbecue fans because they trust three things about Ray Ray's," it posted.

The chain had already closed some locations prior to its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing.
Recent Ray Ray's closures:

Johnstown location: Closed as of Nov. 12, 2025.

Marion location: Closed as of Nov. 12, 2025.

Linworth food truck: Closed in November 2025 as part of consolidation.
Source: Columbus Underground

The chain did not state in its bankruptcy filing whether it planned to close any other locations. Currently, four locations remain in operation, according to the Ray Ray's Hog Pit website.

Clintonville (Columbus): Dine-in & carry-out.
Source: Ray Rays Hog Pit

Franklinton (at Land-Grant Brewing): BBQ service inside a brewery.

Westerville: Drive-thru & walk-up carry-out.

Granville: Dine-in & drive-thru.

Ray Ray's has been a local favorite since 2009.Ray Ray's Hog Pit


Smoke Ring, LLC bankruptcy details

Case name:Smoke Ring, LLC has filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy, according to Inforuptcy.

Court:United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio (Columbus Division): The federal bankruptcy court covering Ohio’s central region. Case number:2:25-bk-55608: This is the unique docket number assigned to the filing.


Filed:December 19, 2025: A voluntary Chapter 11 petition was submitted on this date, according to Inforuptcy.


Debts and assets: The company reported between $1 million and $10 million in both assets and liabilities.


Judge: Assigned to Judge Mina Nami Khorrami.


Status:Debtor in possession; the company remains in control of its business operations while restructuring.


Business address & DBA names:
• 6670 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229
• Also known as Ray Ray’s, Ray Ray’s Hog Pit, and Ray Ray’s Ohio Style.


Next step deadline: Under Subchapter V rules, a reorganization plan is due by March 19, 2026.
Sources: Inforuptcy, PacerMonitor

2024 and 2025 BBQ‑related bankruptcy filings

Smokin’ Dutchman Holdings (Dickey’s Barbecue franchisee): A franchise operator of Dickey’s Barbecue Pit in Michigan filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to reorganize debt for four Dickey’s locations, citing financial strain from franchise obligations ($2.1M debt), reported Nation's Restaurant News.

Smokin’ Dutchman (Michigan): Sometimes referenced in reports under Dickey’s franchisee context, highlighting stress in the franchise BBQ ecosystem, according to QSR Magazine.

Sticky Fingers Restaurants LLC (BBQ chain): Filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March 2025 after years of financial pressure, including leadership changes and restaurant closures; assets were small compared to liabilities, according to Tasting Table.


Burnt BBQ & Tacos (Plano, TX): Filed for Chapter 11 Subchapter V bankruptcy on July 23, 2025. A small‑business BBQ‑style concept combining BBQ and tacos with limited debt, shared TheStreet.

Related: Breakfast-all-day chain closes all locations, files bankruptcy

This story was originally published by TheStreet on Dec 20, 2025, where it first appeared in the Restaurants section

Trump is threatening to get rid of one of the biggest reasons prices have remained in check

Cars are one of the top goods the United States imports from Mexico. Along with other goods from Mexico and Canada, cars have been able to enter the US duty-free if they comply with the terms of a trilateral trade agreement known as USMCA. - Victoria Razo/Bloomberg/Getty Images


When President Donald Trump introduced his “Liberation Day” tariffs in April, many economists predicted Americans would soon experience massive price increases. While inflation has ticked up in the eight months that passed, it’s been nowhere near levels initially projected.

A big reason for that: Nearly everything from clothing to toothpaste produced by America’s top two trading partners, Mexico and Canada, has been exempt from duties if goods comply with the terms of a trilateral free-trade agreement known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), which Trump inked during his first term.

But the deal, which replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement, is scheduled to undergo a review in July, and already Trump is signaling he wants out. If that happens, it likely would usher in a floodgate of higher prices from which Americans have so far been shielded.

“We’ll either let it expire or we’ll maybe work out another deal with Mexico and Canada,” Trump said Wednesday. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer also said in a Politico interview, “the reason why we built a review period into USMCA was in case we needed to revise it, review it or exit it.”

The president’s stance could change between now and July, and the White House told CNN that. “Discussion about what hypothetical trade deals that have not yet been negotiated could look like is meaningless speculation,” spokesman Kush Desai said.

Prior to Trump’s second term, goods from Mexico and Canada essentially entered the US duty-free even if they weren’t USMCA compliant because there weren’t tariffs in place. But Trump introduced tariffs of 25% on non-USMCA-compliant products from Mexico and 35% from Canada.

Unlike those two countries, every other nation’s exports to the United States have been subject to higher tariffs over the past year, barring exemptions for certain goods. Those rates at one point went as high as 145% in the case of China.

Prior to Trump’s second term, goods from Mexico and Canada essentially entered the US duty-free even if they weren’t USMCA compliant because there weren’t tariffs in place. That helps explain why 38% of imports from Canada and 49% of imports from Mexico were USMCA compliant last year, according to US Commerce Department data. But as of August this year, those shares rose to nearly 86% of imports from Canada and 87% of imports from Mexico.

“Increased compliance with USMCA has shielded billions of dollars’ worth of imports from the new tariffs,” said Erica York, vice president of federal tax policy at the conservative-leaning Tax Foundation.

If USMCA exemptions weren’t in place, “Americans would face significantly higher prices,” she said. “That would make American workers poorer and American businesses less competitive, and for no good reason.”

Consumer electronics and clothing are among the goods that could be most vulnerable to price increases, given that the United States has become more reliant on its neighbors for such items

Additionally, supply chains across all three countries have grown more intertwined, with components often crossing the American border multiple times during the assembly process. That means that even apparel and electronics, as well as other domestically produced goods, could be impacted by potentially higher tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods and get passed on to consumers.

“USMCA is a cornerstone of North America’s electronics manufacturing ecosystem. Terminating it would disrupt the production system that US manufacturers rely on, leading to longer lead times and higher input costs,” said Chris Mitchell, vice president for global government relations at the Global Electronics Association. “Those pressures would ultimately translate into higher prices for automotive, consumer, and medical electronics.”

Trump Brags About Suing the Government and Declares, ‘I Hereby Give Myself $1 Billion’



Michael Luciano
Fri, December 19, 2025
MEDIATE  

Speaking at a rally on Friday night, President Donald Trump bragged about his demand that the U.S. government give him a huge payout, and said he would be the ultimate arbiter of whether he will receive the money.

In October, The New York Times reported that Trump was demanding that the Department of Justice pay him $230 million as compensation for the two federal investigations into his activities. Trump submitted claims through an administrative process that is often a prelude to a lawsuit. The complaints, which were filed in 2023 and 2024, cite the FBI’s execution of a search warrant at his Mar-a-Lago residence in 2022, and the bureau’s investigation into possible ties between the president’s 2016 campaign and the Russian government.

Speaking in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, Trump suddenly spoke of a $1 billion sum that he claimed he would give to charity were he to receive it.

“We have all the evidence,” Trump claimed. “And we have to do something about it. We have to do something about it. It’s illegal and disgusting. You know, I brought a lawsuit, and I’m winning the lawsuit. There’s only one problem. I’m the one who has to settle it. In other words, I am suing, and I’m the one that’s supposed to settle it.”

He added:
There’s never been a case like this. Donald Trump sues the United States of America. Donald Trump becomes president. And now Donald Trump has to settle the suit. I hereby give myself $1 billion. Actually, maybe I shouldn’t give it to charity. Maybe I should keep the money. No? A lot of people say do it. I don’t wanna do it. But whatever happens, it’s all going to good charities. Is that ok? All going to good charities. But isn’t that a strange position to be in? I’ve gotta make, I’ve gotta make a deal. I negotiate with myself.

Storied Law Firm Pays Brutal Price for Surrendering to Trump

Janna Brancolini, Tom Sanders
Fri, December 19, 2025 
The Daily Beast 

Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images

A storied Wall Street law firm that hemorrhaged talent after bending the knee to President Donald Trump has announced plans to merge with a much larger firm in a bid to save its practice.

Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft had been actively looking for a merger partner after many of its top attorneys left over the firm’s decision to pledge $100 million in pro bono work to support the president’s priorities, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Last spring, the president signed a series of executive orders stripping attorneys from certain firms of their security clearances, limiting their access to government buildings, and terminating government contracts with the firms.

While some firms like Cadwalader made deals with the administration to avoid a similar punishment, others fought the orders and won big in court, adding to the humiliation of the capitulating firms.

In the wake of the firm’s deal with Trump, key partner groups at Cadwalader, which was founded in 1792 and is Wall Street’s oldest firm, quickly began making lateral moves to other practices, Above the Law reported.

Hogan Lovells is set to merge with Cadwalader, Wall Street’s oldest law firm. 
/ Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images

The firm, which brings in about $638 million in annual revenue, is now merging with Hogan Lovells, which brought in nearly $3 billion last year, more than quadruple the size of Cadwalader, according to Above the Law.

Hogan Lovells’ chief executive, Miguel Zaldivar Jr., will lead the combined firm, according to the Journal. Cadwalader’s current co-managing partners will be relegated to the new firm’s management committee.

Partners at both firms still need to vote to finalize the merger next year.

The deal is being described as the legal industry’s largest-ever merger, creating a $3.6 billion megafirm with more than 3,000 lawyers, according to the Journal.

Hogan Lovells is headquartered in London and Washington, D.C.

Commenting on the merger, Zaldivar said Wall Street had long been the firm’s “missing piece,” telling the Journal, “We felt that we needed to consolidate our position with a strong finance practice in New York.”

“It’s a deal that makes perfect sense,” he added.

Cadwalader lost hundreds of employees after agreeing to work with the Trump administration. / Wikimedia

Despite being burned by its prior dealings with Trump, Cadwalader co-managing partner Pat Quinn reaffirmed the company’s commitment to pro bono legal work in a statement shared by Reuters.

However, he declined to say whether the firm’s previous deal with the administration would apply to the merged firm.

Last year, another famous Wall Street firm, Shearman & Sterling, merged with Allen & Overy to create a $3.4 billion business. Chicago-based firm Winston & Strawn also announced plans on Monday to merge with U.K. practice Taylor Wessing in 2026.

“The most attractive legal market today, and the most lucrative market, is that New York-London corridor,” Valdivar explained to Reuters.

The Daily Beast has contacted Cadwalader for further comment.
Trump, 79, Rushes to Brag About Poorly Attended Rally

Katie Francis
Sat, December 20, 2025 
THE DAILY BEAST

Donald Trump went on an online midnight ramble after failing to draw a major crowd for a North Carolina rally Friday night.

The president has been back on the campaign trail to ramp up support for the 2026 midterms—where MAGA odds aren’t looking great. Evidence of Trump’s plummeting approval rating was reflected in his inability to fill seats with adoring supporters at his last rally of the year in Rocky Mount, North Carolina.

Keen to rewrite the history of the event as soon as possible, Trump wrote on Truth Social early on Saturday morning: “Just leaving North Carolina, where the Crowd was amazing!”


Trump logged onto Truth Social just after midnight to counter reports that his North Carolina rally couldn't draw a decent crowd. / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty Images

He added, “They will hopefully be voting for Michael Whatley, to be the next Senator. His opponent, former Governor Roy Cooper, is a Radical Left Lunatic who let the people of North Carolina down, especially in time of need.”

The MAGA leader then assured his readers that low drug prices “alone should win the Midterms for Republicans!” before veering away from politics to praise Jake Paul for trying his best in a boxing match against “a very talented and large Anthony Joshua.”



A vendor selling Trump merch outside the Rocky Mount Event Center said it was 'strange' how quiet the rally was, but the president seemed to disagree. / Truth Social/@realDonaldTrump

While Trump painted a pretty picture of his rally, a report from the Washington Post suggested otherwise. The paper detailed the smaller-than-average crowd, punctuated by cash-strapped attendees who couldn’t afford any MAGA merch.


Sadly for a Trump merch seller outside the venue, the president’s supporters didn’t want to spend their tight funds on MAGA-themed stocking fillers.

“Usually, Trump rallies are like a football tailgate. This is strange,” the seller told the Post as he packed up his unsold wares on the quiet street before the speech kicked off.

Although Trump may have been playing to a smaller crowd than usual, those who did spend the final Friday before Christmas in attendance were treated to a meandering performance covering everything from the “not easy” cognitive tests he’s mysteriously been taking to the way Melania stores her underwear.


Those who deigned to turn up to the event listened to an unusual speech covering everything from Trump's cognitive testing to his wife's underwear storage. / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty ImagesMore

Complaining about how the FBI rifled through the First Lady’s closets and drawers during their 2022 raid of Mar-a-Lago, the president added some unusual details about her housekeeping skills.

“She’s a very meticulous person... Everything is perfect. Her undergarments, sometimes referred to as panties, are folded perfect, wrapped, they’re like so perfect. I say, ‘That’s beautiful,’” he shared.

En-route to Mar-a-Lago Christmas vacation, Trump tries sales pitch on economy to skeptical voters

Andrew Feinberg
Fri, December 19, 2025 
THE INDEPENDENT, UK


Trump stopped in North Carolina on his way to Palm Beach for a two-week vacation at his Mar-a-Lago club (AP)

With his approval ratings at the lowest levels of his presidency and polls showing Americans believing that he has taken his expansive view of presidential power too far, President Donald Trump is headed to his Palm Beach, Florida social club to close out his year with a two-week vacation.

But before he could get away from the continued furor over the Epstein files and head off for leisure time, golf and parties on the Mar-a-Lago patio, the president had to convince voters at a Rocky Mount, North Carolina rally that whatever economic pain they are feeling nearly a year into his second term in office has absolutely nothing to do with him.

For the first 20 or so minutes after he took the stage, it wasn’t clear whether he would stick to that plan.

Trump, sounding hoarse and tired with his speech slurring at times, launched into a meandering, somnolent soliloquy that seemed more focused on recounting what he’d already told reporters several hours earlier, when he hosted pharmaceutical company executives at the White House.

He claimed the agreements with the drug makers, which will see them offer their products at lower costs on a website bearing his name, should be enough to help his party retain control of Congress next year.

“Your drugs are coming down at levels that nobody ever thought was possible. This achievement alone should win us for midterms,” he said.

Continuing his stream-of-consciousness remarks, the president began musing aloud about how he was “taking on the gigantic health insurance companies” by refusing to support extending tax credits that expire at the end of this year, causing premiums for millions of Americans to skyrocket.

He falsely claimed that the Affordable Care Act, the landmark 2010 health care reform law, was “created to make insurance companies rich” and tried to blame Congressional Democrats for the premium increases that will take effect next month.

“I want the money to go directly to the people so you can buy your own health care, and you'll get much better health care at a much lower price,” he said, without explaining how individuals could use the small amount he has proposed to give out to purchase health insurance at a lower rate.

Trump then suggested he could talk insurance executives into lowering premiums by calling them to the White House for a meeting in the same way he has browbeaten drug companies into lowering prices by threatening to tax pharmaceutical imports.

“Maybe they'll surprise us, but maybe we'll ask them for a 50% cut, and maybe they'll give it. You know, you never know. You saw what happened with the drug companies,” he said.

As he kept speaking, Trump interspersed his prepared remarks with racist rants about Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar, who he said should be thrown out of the country while accusing her of fabricating a story about her son being stopped by law enforcement recently, and mused aloud about how he workshopped a nickname for Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, his former ally who is resigning her seat at the beginning of next month.

It took nearly an hour until the president appeared to return to his prepared remarks by launching into a series of unverifiable claims about how “100 percent” of jobs created during his presidency so far have been in the private sector and boasting of how he is building a “Trump economic boom” with “these factories, auto plants [and] AI plants.”


Trump did not mention the Justice Department’s partial release of the Epstein files during his meandering remarks (AFP via Getty Images)

He also boasted of having placed 25 percent import taxes on foreign cars, 50 percent import taxes on steel, and taxes as high as 50 percent on imported furniture “to save North Carolina's cherished furniture industry, which has been decimated by China.”

“I was very good at real estate, but I used to come to North Carolina to buy furniture for lobbies or furniture for hotels, and I was here a lot. I mean, you've been decimated, but it's coming back then, because I put tariffs on,” he said.

Trump’s stopover in North Carolina on his way to vacation was the second campaign-style rally he has held in as many weeks in what the White House has said will be a series of events meant to promote his administration’s economic record.

But thus far, it does not appear voters are buying what he is selling — whether from the White House or from the stump at his signature rallies.

A National Public Radio / Marist College survey released this week found that 57 percent of respondents disapprove of Trump’s economic management, compared with 36 percent who approve — the lowest rating on this issue across his two terms in office.

While the polling data showed a split among partisans, with 81 percent of Republicans saying Trump is doing a good job and 91 percent of Democrats holding the opposite view, a full 68 percent of self-described independents say they disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy.

It also showed that Trump’s overall approval rating has sunk to 38 percent — his lowest-recorded level of approval since the end of his first term in 2021.


Trump’s approval rating is at the lowest levels recorded since he began his second term in the White House (AFP via Getty Images)

As far as Americans’ views of “affordability” go, the survey did not present a rosy picture for Trump on that topic, either.

About 70 percent of respondents — including nearly half of Republicans — said that the cost of living in their neighborhood is not affordable at all or not very affordable. In contrast, about 30 percent of respondents said the cost of living in their area is affordable, marking a 25-point drop from June.

At the same time, roughly one in three respondents said that their personal financial situation has deteriorated in 2025. About the same share expect their financial situation to get worse next year.

A majority of respondents, 52 percent, also said the U.S. is currently in a recession. And slightly more said Democrats are better equipped to manage the economy than Republicans — 37 percent versus 33 percent.

According to the latest unemployment data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans do have reason to be concerned.

While the U.S. economy added 64,000 jobs last month, the report stated that it shed 105,000 positions during the previous month in October. Further revisions by the Labor Department also saw 33,000 jobs removed from August and September payrolls as well.

The BLS report also showed the nation’s unemployment rate climbing to 4.6 percent, marking its highest level since 2021.

Overall, hiring momentum has clearly waned, hampered by uncertainty surrounding Trump’s tariffs and the lingering impact of the high interest rates implemented by the Federal Reserve in 2022 and 2023 to curb inflation.

American companies are largely retaining their existing workforce but remain hesitant to hire new staff as they grapple with integrating artificial intelligence and adapting to Trump’s unpredictable policies, particularly his double-digit taxes on imports from around the world.

In a statement, Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin panned the president’s performance as a “desperate” follow-up to his “delusional” address to the nation just days earlier, and said the rally on Friday was more of the same.

“North Carolinians are struggling, and they aren’t falling for Trump’s spin,” he said.

“Working families in North Carolina and across the country are fed up with having their food, health care, and hard-earned dollars ripped away from them so that Trump’s billionaire donors can attend Great Gatsby parties and enjoy massive tax handouts.”

Trump Told Jesse Watters He's Building White House Ballroom as a 'Monument' to Himself 'Because No One Else Will,' Host Claims


Watters, 47, recounted the alleged conversation to a large crowd at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest in Phoenix on Dec. 20

Toria Sheffield
Sun, December 21, 2025
PEOPLE




NEED TO KNOW

Fox News host Jesse Watters claimed that President Donald Trump told him he is building the new White House ballroom as a “monument” to himself


He added that Trump said he was doing so because “no one else will”



Watters recounted the alleged conversation while speaking at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest in Phoenix on Dec. 20

Jesse Watters claims President Donald Trump told him he is constructing the new White House ballroom as a “monument” to himself — and that he’s doing it “because no one else will.”

The Fox News host recounted the alleged conversation while speaking at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest, a multiday conservative conference and festival in Phoenix, on Saturday, Dec. 20. A video of the moment has since been posted on X.

Watters, 47, told the large crowd that he was sharing a meal with Trump, 79, when the president asked him if he wanted to see a rendition of “the big, beautiful ballroom.”

“I said, ‘Sure, let me see it,’ “ Watters continued. “He [Trump] rolls the whole thing out. And guys, I don't know if you know this — the ballroom is huge. Like, I said, ‘Mr. President, the ballroom is four times the size of the White House.' ”


McCrery Architects/The White HouseRendering of the interior of the proposed White House ballroom

“He said, ‘Jesse, it's a monument. I'm building a monument to myself — because no one else will,' " Watters added, eliciting loud laughs from the audience.

Trump recently said that the 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which is being built on the site of the former East Wing, will now cost $400 million — a significant jump from earlier estimates.

Trump announced the updated price tag on Dec. 17 during a Hanukkah reception at the White House, where he also revealed that a federal judge has allowed construction on the controversial project to move forward. He repeated the figure multiple times while thanking the official for clearing the way for continued construction, describing the ruling as an act of “courage.”

The ballroom — which is being funded entirely by private donors, including a contribution from Trump himself — is expected to be completed by summer 2028.


PEDRO UGARTE/AFP via GettyHeavy machinery tears down a section of the East Wing as construction begins on the White House ballroom on Oct. 20, 2025More

Trump has argued that the sprawling ballroom is needed so future presidents can host large events indoors rather than on the South Lawn.

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It's unclear just how many people the space can accommodate. Trump told NBC News in September that it would hold up to 900 people; BBC reporting cites plans for a capacity of 1,350.

On Dec. 16, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon rejected a request from the National Trust for Historic Preservation to temporarily halt construction while the project undergoes additional review, the Associated Press reported.


'Trump's Address Was A Lie Filled Mess,' Says Fox News Host. 'The Inflation Story Being Sold By Trump Doesn't Match Real Life'

However, the judge said he plans to hold a hearing in January on the group’s request for a preliminary injunction and warned the administration not to make underground construction decisions that would lock in the design of the ballroom above ground, per Bloomberg.

Read the original article on People



Head of group suing over White House ballroom says she trusts Trump-picked chairman to do his job

DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Fri, December 19, 2025


Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House where the East Wing once stood, Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)(ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House where the East Wing once stood, Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)(ASSOCIATED PRESS)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation said Friday she trusts the Trump-appointed chairman of a federal planning commission to do his job and give serious review to President Donald Trump’s proposal to add a ballroom to the White House.

Carol Quillen said in an interview that she takes Will Scharf, chairman of the National Capital Planning Commission, “at his word” after he said at the panel's December meeting that the review process would be treated seriously once the White House submits the plans.

Scharf said at that meeting that he expected to receive the plans sometime this month, and the panel's review process would happen at a “normal and deliberative pace.”

Quillen said she trusted that would be the case.

“I take him at his word that the process will be conducted as it always is, deliberately and seriously, and that the commission will do its job," she said.

The White House has not responded to multiple queries about when the ballroom plans will be shared with Scharf’s panel as well as the Commission of Fine Arts. The planning commission on Friday released the agenda for its January meeting and the “East Wing Modernization Project” is listed for an “information presentation,” often the first step in its review of a project.

The National Trust last week asked a federal court to halt the ballroom construction until it is subjected to multiple independent reviews, public comment and wins approval from Congress. The government argued in court that the lawsuit was premature.

federal judge this week denied the National Trust's request for a temporary restraining order but scheduled a January hearing on its motion for a preliminary injunction. Such a step would halt all construction until the reviews, which could take months, are completed.

Quillen said her private nonprofit organization was not asking for the Republican president's proposal to go through reviews just for the sake of doing so. She said the process inevitably leads to a better project because multiple independent parties get to comment on it.

The National Trust was chartered in part to ensure the public participates in decisions that affect the country's historic resources, she said, “and the White House is arguably the nation's most iconic building.”

She said the organization did not sue earlier because legal action is “our last resort” and because of its history of working with administrations.

In Trump's first term, the administration submitted plans to the National Capital Planning Commission for new fencing for the White House perimeter and a tennis pavilion on the south grounds.


Bernie Sanders Says A New 'Breed Of Uber Capitalists' Has Emerged. They Truly Believe They Are 'Superior Human Beings'
Benzinga134


Quillen declined to speculate about why Trump had not already done so for a White House ballroom he has long desired and has moved quickly to build since he returned to office. He complains regularly that the East Room and State Dining Room — two of the largest public spaces in the White House — are too small and has criticized the practice of hosting foreign leaders at state dinners in tents on the south grounds.

Trump has proposed building a 90,000-square-foot ballroom, big enough to accommodate 999 people, where the East Wing of the White House stood for decades until he had it torn down in October in a move that “caught us by surprise,” Quillen said.

He recently upped the construction cost estimate to $400 million, double the original $200 million price, and has said no public money will pay for it. The White House has said the ballroom will be ready before Trump's term ends in January 2029.

The National Trust asserted in its lawsuit that the ballroom plans should have been submitted to the National Capital Planning Commission, the Commission of Fine Arts and Congress before any action.

The lawsuit notes that the organization wrote to those entities and the National Park Service, which oversees the White House grounds, on Oct. 21, after the East Wing demolition began, asking for the projects to be paused and for the administration to comply with federal law. It received no response, the lawsuit said.

The government said in its written response that the ballroom plans have not been finalized despite continuing demolition and other work to prepare the site for eventual construction, which is not expected to begin until April 2026, at the earliest.

The administration also argued that Trump has authority to modify the White House and included the extensive history of changes and additions to the Executive Mansion since it was built more than 200 years ago. It also asserted that the president is not subject to statutes cited by the National Trust.