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  • Trump reveals renovated Lincoln Bedroom bathroom as his White House remodel continues – WTOP News

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    President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he has renovated the Lincoln Bedroom bathroom, sharing before and after images on social media as he continues to put his touch on the White House.

    (CNN) — President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he has renovated the Lincoln Bedroom bathroom, sharing before and after images on social media as he continues to put his touch on the White House.

    “I renovated the Lincoln Bathroom in the White House. It was renovated in the 1940s in an art deco green tile style, which was totally inappropriate for the Lincoln Era,” Trump said on Truth Social. “I did it in black and white polished Statuary marble. This was very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln and, in fact, could be the marble that was originally there!”

    The president posted about the renovations aboard Air Force One en route to Florida, where he will spend the weekend. The post comes as the government remains shutdown, and the Trump administration says it will not tap into emergency funds to fund SNAP food assistance benefits through the month of November.

    Shortly after, Trump posted more images of the bathroom, showing gold detailing on the faucet and shower handle, as well as other fixtures. A plush white robe with presidential seal also hangs on a golden hook.

    The president discussed the changes he was making to the bathroom earlier this month during a dinner at the White House, saying in part that the old style of the bathroom “was not exactly Abe Lincoln.”

    “We have little things like at the Lincoln Bedroom. The bathroom was done by the Truman family and you know, long time ago. And it’s done in a green tile, and it’s done in a style that was not exactly Abe Lincoln,” the president said.

    “It’s actually Art Deco. And Art Deco doesn’t go with, you know, 1850 and Civil Wars…But what does do is statuary marble. So I ripped it apart and we built a bathroom. It’s absolutely gorgeous and totally in keeping with that time because the Lincoln bedroom is, uh, so incredible, for those of you that have seen it,” he added.

    Trump on Friday also gave a status update on a separate construction project he’s overseeing at the Kennedy Center, which he said he “just inspected.”

    “The exterior columns, which were in serious danger of corrosion if something weren’t done, are completed, and look magnificent in White Enamel — Like a different place! Marble is being done, stages are being renovated, new seats, new chairs, and new fabrics will soon be installed, and magnificent high end carpeting throughout the building. It is happening faster than anticipated, one of my trademarks,” Trump said.

    “We are bringing this building back to life. It was dead as a doornail, but it will soon be beautiful again!” he added.

    The moves are part of Trump’s effort to put his stamp on the White House – which has seen a slew of changes since he took office – and the greater DC area.

    So far, the renovations include paving over the grass in the historic Rose Garden, demolishing the East Wing to make way for a new ballroom and adorning the Oval Office with gold.

    Trump often says the White House needed a new ballroom to host world leaders, to avoid situations where they are outside and a temporary tent has to be used when it rains. And he frequently remarked that the Rose Garden paving was necessary, because women in high heels would sink into the grass during events. It now has a touch of Mar-a-Lago with the same white and yellow umbrellas at tables on the patio.

    His redecoration of the Oval Office to his liking, as presidents do when they take office, has tripled the number of paintings on the walls with gold just about everywhere. Trump also installed portraits of every president framed in gold on the West Colonnade – except for former President Joe Biden who is instead represented by his autopen signature – and large floor-to-ceiling mirrors, which press can see when they are escorted into the Oval Office.

    In addition to those changes, Trump plans to build a new arch monument in DC in honor of the country’s 250th anniversary.

    As he pushes forward with his plans to leave his mark on the White House and the nation’s capital, Trump this week fired the members of the Commission of Fine Arts. The independent federal agency is charged with advising the president, Congress and the city of Washington, DC, on “matters of design and aesthetics.” The president has also installed allies on the National Capital Planning Commission, which will be tasked with approving plans for the new ballroom on White House grounds.

    This story has been updated with additional details.

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    ™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • Trump Adds Gold and Marble to Lincoln Bathroom, As Abe Would Have Wanted

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    Photo: TruthSocial/@realDonaldTrump

    You’ve certainly heard of the Lincoln Bedroom in the White House. But were you aware that there is also a Lincoln Bathroom? No? Well, it’s probably for the best, because it was a total dump!

    Until Donald Trump got his hands on it, that is:

    Photo: TruthSocial/@realDonaldTrump

    As Trump revealed in this Truth Social post on Friday, the bathroom off the Lincoln Bedroom has been renovated as part of his ongoing Midas-like effort to add gold to just about every surface in the White House. Here’s a closer look at the Art Deco–style “before”:

    And here’s the “after”:

    Trump then sent out an additional six Truth Social posts showing off photos of the renovation. Here’s a small sample:

    If the goal was to make people using the Lincoln Bathroom feel like they are trapped in block marble, the renovation clearly succeeded. But Trump said his main issue was historical accuracy, complaining that the previous design “was totally inappropriate for the Lincoln Era.”

    “I did it in black and white polished Statuary marble,” he explained. “This was very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln and, in fact, could be the marble that was originally there.”

    Marble walls and floors with polished gold fixtures certainly weren’t common for bathrooms of the time — nor was indoor plumbing. The Springfield, Illinois, home where the Lincolns lived before he was elected president had an outhouse, which you can still visit:

    Photo: Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress

    The family quarters in the White House were an upgrade for the Lincolns simply because the residence had indoor plumbing. However, when they moved to Washington in March 1861, Mary Lincoln was disappointed to discover that many areas of the White House were worn down. She embarked on a massive renovation project, according to WhiteHouseHistory.org:

    Concluding that it would be “a degradation” to subject her family and her guests—to such surroundings, the new first lady launched a monumental redecorating project, purchasing new carpets, draperies, wallpaper, furnishings, china, and books, and modernizing plumbing, heating, and lighting.

    Abraham Lincoln was furious when his wife overran a congressional appropriation allocated for the renovation by about 30 percent. After Mary spent $7,500 on furniture, including the Lincoln Bed, in the fall of 1861, she sent Commissioner of Public Buildings Benjamin Brown French to deliver the bad news to her husband. As the First Lady predicted, he was irate.

    “It would stink in the nostrils of the American people to have it said that the president of the United States had approved a bill over-running an appropriation of $20,000 for flub dubs for this damned old house, when the soldiers cannot have blankets,” he shouted at French.

    So perhaps Trump decking out a White House bathroom in marble and gold just as millions of Americans are poised to lose SNAP benefits due to a government shutdown actually wouldn’t go over well with “Honest Abe”? But at least we know Mary Lincoln would have loved it!


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    Margaret Hartmann

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  • Are the White House projects under Trump and Obama similar?

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    President Donald Trump demolished the White House’s East Wing, startling historic preservationists and drawing national ire on his way to building what he says will be a new 90,000-square-foot ballroom.

    Amid criticism of this projected $300 million project, Trump’s defenders are pointing to another White House renovation in recent memory to suggest the current outrage is unwarranted.

    “A CNN report from 2010: $376 million White House renovation during the Obama Administration,” read an Oct. 22 X post that shared a 25-second clip of a CNN news story. “Where was the Democrat outrage then?”

    “BREAKING,” read another X post that reshared the same video clip. “People are digging up a 2010 CNN clip showing Obama’s $376M White House makeover — all paid for by taxpayers. Meanwhile President Trump’s $250M ballroom is coming out of his own pocket.”

    Obama was president during a White House renovation. But differences between that project and Trump’s project are significant.

    Congress in 2008 approved funding for White House work after a government report produced  during President George W. Bush’s second term found the building needed upgrades to its water pipes and electrical systems, CNN reported in 2010. The changes improved heating, cooling, and fire alarm systems that hadn’t been updated since 1902 or 1934. 

    Bob Peck, then commissioner of the U.S. General Services Administration’s Public Buildings Service, told CNN in 2010 that the White House sometimes experienced power outages and leaky pipes. 

    Obama’s underground renovations affected mainly the building’s interior. 

    Separately, the Obamas in 2009 updated and redecorated the White House’s interior without using taxpayer money. The New York Times reported in 2020 that the White House’s new furnishings were paid for largely with Obama’s book royalties and donations. Obama also adapted the White House tennis court so it could be used as a basketball court. 

    Trump’s East Wing demolition and ballroom addition have not been approved by the federal agency that oversees federal building construction and renovations. Trump said the project aims to expand the East Wing’s seating capacity from 200 people to 999. 

    The White House originally said the project would cost $200 million, but Trump has since said it will be $300 million, funded by donations. Donors include individuals and corporations such as Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft, The Washington Post reported.

    “It’s unprecedented, in all the wrong ways, including that the American public has been kept totally in the dark about the President’s plans,” said Sara Bronin, Freda H. Alverson professor of law at the George Washington University Law School.

    Priya Jain, chair of the Society of Architectural Historians’ Heritage Conservation Committee, pushed back against calling Trump’s project a renovation: “This project involves total destruction of a large part of the building,” she said.

    Obama’s era project covered renovations, Trump’s knocked down a whole wing

    The Obama-era renovation started in 2010 with an estimated $376 million cost to improve the East and West Wings’ infrastructure, CNN reported in 2010.

    Peck described the project as largely underground utility work. “It doesn’t do a whole lot of good to have a building that’s the sort of the image of the free world standing up there and not functioning well,” Peck told CNN when questioned about the cost. 

    Bloomberg News reported in 2010 that the Obama renovation was the biggest White House upgrade since President Harry Truman was in office. From 1948 to 1952, Truman oversaw the White House’s historic gutting, renovation and expansion in response to significant structural issues that at one point resulted in the leg of his daughter’s piano breaking through the floor.

    Trump’s project will be the first major exterior change of the White House in 83 years, historic preservationists say. 

    “Such a significant change to a historic building of this import should follow a rigorous and deliberate design and review process,” the Society of Architectural Historians said in an Oct. 16 statement.

    Since taking office a second time, Trump has also added gold highlights inside the Oval Office and paved over the Rose Garden lawn. The National Park Service oversaw the Rose Garden project.

    The presidents’ projects differ in federal agency approval

    At a September meeting of the National Capital Planning Commission —  the federal agency that oversees federal building construction and renovations — the Trump-appointed commission chair Will Scharf said the agency has no jurisdiction over “demolition and site preparation work,” only over construction and “vertical build.” The commission was expected to meet Nov. 6, but it’s unclear whether that will happen if the federal government shutdown continues. 

    PolitiFact looked at National Planning Commission’s Project Search for approval records of the Obama renovations, but the database doesn’t have records before Jan. 2012. We reached out to the commission to ask if they approved the 2010 renovations, but received no response because of their closure.

    The White House is exempt from Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, which says that each federal agency must consider public views and concerns about historic preservation when making final project decisions. Michael Spencer, an associate professor in the University of Mary Washington’s historic preservation department said presidents have nevertheless typically undertaken White House projects in the spirit of public transparency. The National Planning Commission and the Commission of Fine Arts approved Trump’s first-term term tennis facility alterations, for example.

    “Most importantly none of these projects involved demolition of existing historic buildings,” Jain said.

    The East Colonnade and East Wing were built in 1902 and 1942, respectively, and, under National Park Service guidelines, should have been assessed for historic significance before being demolished, she said.

    PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

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  • Photos: Trump hosts trick-or-treaters for White House Halloween bash

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    President Trump and first lady Melania Trump hosted star athletes, princesses, dinosaurs and at least one Trump impersonator at the White House’s annual Halloween event Thursday. 

    Hours after the president returned from a dayslong trip to Asia, the first couple — sans costumes — spent just under an hour handing out full-size chocolate bars to a line of trick-or-treaters, including military and law enforcement families, foster and adoptive families, and the children of Trump administration staffers.

    “It’s a long line,” Mr. Trump shouted to the press at one point, according to a pool reporter. “It’s almost as big as the ballroom.”

    The Air Force Band played a combination of spooky tunes and pop hits, including instrumental versions of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” Imagine Dragons’ “Radioactive” and Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire.”

    The president and first lady hand out candy to a trick-or-treater seemingly dressed up like Mr. Trump on Oct. 30, 2025. 

    JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


    Trump Halloween

    President Trump high-fives his doppelgänger.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP


    Trump Halloween

    President Trump balances a piece of candy atop a trick-or-treater seemingly dressed as electronic DJ Mashmallo, reenacting a viral moment from the White House’s 2019 Halloween party.

    Alex Brandon / AP


    Trump Halloween

    A group of trick-or-treaters come dressed as the president’s favorite fast-food joint.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP


    Trump Halloween

    The first lady comforts a young trick-or-treater.

    Alex Brandon / AP


    Trump Halloween

    The president hands out candy to a visitor.

    Alex Brandon / AP


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    Mr. Trump signs a golf ball for a trick-or-treater dressed up as a pro golfer.

    JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


    First Lady Melania Trump Hosts Halloween Party At The White House

    The president greets Winnie-the-Pooh and retired NFL great Tom Brady.

    Alex Wong / Getty Images


    Trump Halloween

    The Trumps hand out candy to White House adviser Stephen Miller, his wife, Katie Miller (dressed as a skeleton), and their children.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP


    Trump Halloween

    President Trump greets White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, her husband, Nicholas Riccio, and their son, Niko.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP


    Trump Halloween

    Alex Brandon / AP


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    The president marvels at one costume.

    JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


    First Lady Melania Trump Hosts Halloween Party At The White House

    Alex Wong / Getty Images


    Trump Halloween

    The Trumps hand out candy to a family dressed as characters from “Sesame Street.”

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP


    US-POLITICS-TRADITION-TRUMP-HALLOWEEN

    JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


    US-POLITICS-TRADITION-TRUMP-HALLOWEEN

    JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


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  • Americans largely oppose Trump tearing down White House East Wing to make way for his ballroom: Poll – WTOP News

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    A 56% majority of Americans oppose the Trump administration tearing down the East Wing of the White House as part of the construction of a 90,000-square-foot ballroom paid for by $300 million in private donations.

    Alex Wong/Getty Images

    (WASHINGTON) — Most Americans oppose the demolition of the White House’s East Wing to make way for President Donald Trump’s ballroom, according to an ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll conducted using Ipsos’ KnowledgePanel.

    A 56% majority of Americans oppose the Trump administration tearing down the East Wing of the White House as part of the construction of a 90,000-square-foot ballroom paid for by $300 million in private donations, including 45% who “strongly” oppose it, the poll finds.

    Just 28% of Americans support it, with 15% strongly supporting the East Wing being torn down for a ballroom, the poll found. Another 16% say they are not sure.

    Support breaks down by party lines, with a 62% majority of Republicans in support and 88% of Democrats opposed. A 61% majority of independents oppose the East Wing tear town and ballroom, with nearly half opposing it strongly, according to the poll.

    Opinions are much stronger among Democrats: 78% of Democrats strongly oppose the teardown and ballroom, a much smaller 35% of Republicans strongly support it.

    A majority of liberals (76%) and about half of moderates (51%) strongly oppose the East Wing teardown and ballroom, while just about a third of conservatives (34%) support it strongly.

    Strong support peaks among strong Trump approvers, with 58% saying they strongly support the teardown of the East Wing and ballroom. Among those who somewhat approve of Trump, just 11% strongly support the plan.

    Among strong Trump disapprovers, 82% strongly oppose tearing down the East Wing and building a ballroom, while a much smaller 37% of those who somewhat disapprove of the president strongly oppose the plan.

    Just about four in 10 conservative Republicans (42%) say they are strongly in favor of the plan. Conversely, 82% of liberal Democrats and 73% of moderate and conservative Democrats oppose it strongly.

    Methodology: This ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll was conducted online via the probability-based Ipsos KnowledgePanel® Oct. 24-28, 2025, in English and Spanish, among a random national sample of 2,725 U.S. adults and has a margin of error of plus or minus 1.9 percentage points, including the design effect. Error margins are larger for subgroups. The partisan divisions are 28% Democrats, 31% Republicans and 41% independents or something else.

    See more details on ABC News’ survey methodology here.

    Copyright © 2025, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • Commentary: Bodies are stacking up in Trump’s deportation deluge. It’s going to get worse

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    Like a teenager armed with their first smartphone, President Trump’s masked immigration enforcers love nothing more than to mug for friendly cameras.

    They gladly invite pseudo-filmmakers — some federal government workers, others conservative influencers or pro-Trump reporters — to embed during raids so they can capture every tamale lady agents slam onto the sidewalk, every protester they pelt with pepper balls, every tear gas canister used to clear away pesky activists. From that mayhem comes slickly produced videos that buttress the Trump administration’s claim that everyone involved in the push to boot illegal immigrants from the U.S. is a hero worthy of cinematic love.

    But not everything that Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Border Patrol and its sister agencies do shows up in their approved rivers of reels.

    Their propagandists aren’t highlighting the story of Jaime Alanís García, a Mexican farmworker who fell 30 feet to his death in Camarillo this summer while trying to escape one of the largest immigration raids in Southern California in decades.

    They’re not making videos about 39-year-old Ismael Ayala-Uribe, an Orange County resident who moved to this country from Mexico as a 4-year-old and died in a Victorville hospital in September after spending weeks in ICE custody complaining about his health.

    They’re not addressing how ICE raids led to the deaths of Josué Castro Rivera and Carlos Roberto Montoya, Central American nationals run over and killed by highway traffic in Virginia and Monrovia while fleeing in terror. Or what happened to Silverio Villegas González, shot dead in his car as he tried to speed away from two ICE agents in suburban Chicago.

    Those men are just some of the 20-plus people who have died in 2025 while caught up in ICE’s machine — the deadliest year for the agency in two decades, per NPR.

    Publicly, the Department of Homeland Security has described those incidents as “tragic” while assigning blame to everything but itself. For instance, a Homeland Security official told the Associated Press that Castro Rivera’s death was “a direct result of every politician, activist and reporter who continue to spread propaganda and misinformation about ICE’s mission and ways to avoid detention” — whatever the hell that means.

    An ICE spokesperson asked for more time to respond to my request for comment, said “Thank you Sir” when I extended my deadline, then never got back to me. Whatever the response would’ve been, Trump’s deportation Leviathan looks like it’s about to get deadlier.

    As reported by my colleagues Andrea Castillo and Rachel Uranga, his administration plans to get rid of more than half of ICE’s field office directors due to grumblings from the White House that the deportations that have swamped large swaths of the United States all year haven’t happened faster and in larger numbers.

    Asked for comment, Tricia McLaughlin, Homeland Security assistant secretary for public affairs, described The Times’ questions as “sensationalism” and added “only the media would describe standard agency personnel changes as a ‘massive shakeup.’”

    Agents are becoming more brazen as more of them get hired thanks to billions of dollars in new funds. In Oakland, one fired a chemical round into the face of a Christian pastor from just feet away. In Santa Ana, another pulled a gun from his waistband and pointed it at activists who had been trailing him from a distance in their car. In the Chicago area, a woman claimed a group of them fired pepper balls at her car even though her two young children were inside.

    La migra knows they can act with impunity because they have the full-throated backing of the White House. Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller crowed on Fox News recently, “To all ICE officers: You have federal immunity in the conduct of your duties.”

    That’s not actually true, but when have facts mattered to this presidency if it gets in the way of its apocalyptic goals?

    Greg Bovino, El Centro Border Patrol sector chief, center, walks with federal agents near an ICE detention facility in Broadview, Ill.

    (Erin Hooley / Associated Press)

    Tasked with turning up the terror dial to 11 is Gregory Bovino, a longtime Border Patrol sector chief based out of El Centro, Calif., who started the year with a raid in Kern County so egregious that a federal judge slammed it as agents “walk[ing] up to people with brown skin and say[ing], ‘Give me your papers.’” A federal judge ordered him to check in with her every day for the foreseeable future after the Border Patrol tear-gassed a neighborhood in a Chicago suburb that was about to host its annual Halloween children’s parade (an appeals court has temporarily blocked the move).

    Bovino now reports directly to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and is expected to pick most of the ICE field office directors from Customs and Border Protection, the arm of the federal government that the Border Patrol belongs to. It logged 180 immigrant deaths under its purview for the 2023 fiscal year, the last year for which stats are publicly available and the third straight year that the number had increased.

    To put someone like Bovino in charge of executing Trump’s deportation plans is like gifting a gas refinery to an arsonist.

    He’s constantly trying to channel the conquering ethos of Wild West, complete with a strutting posse of agents — some with cowboy hats — following him everywhere, white horses trailed by American flags for photo ops and constant shout-outs to “Ma and Pa America” when speaking to the media. When asked by a CBS News reporter recently when his self-titled “Mean Green Machine” would end its Chicago campaign — one that has seen armed troops march through downtown and man boats on the Chicago River like they were patrolling Baghdad — Bovino replied, “When all the illegal aliens [self-deport] and/or we arrest ‘em all.”

    Such scorched-earth jibber-jabber underlines a deportation policy under which the possibility of death for those it pursues is baked into its foundation. ICE plans to hire dozens of healthcare workers — doctors, nurses, psychiatrists — in anticipation of Trump’s plans to build more detention camps, many slated for inhospitable locations like the so-called Alligator Alcatraz camp in the Florida Everglades. That was announced to the world on social media with an AI-generated image of grinning alligators wearing MAGA caps — as if the White House was salivating at the prospect of desperate people trying to escape only to find certain carnage.

    In his CBS News interview, Bovino described the force his team has used in Chicago — where someone was shot and killed, a pastors got hit with pepper balls from high above and the sound of windshields broken by immigration agents looking to snatch someone from their cars is now part of the Windy City’s soundtrack — as “exemplary.” The Border Patrol’s peewee Patton added he felt his guys used “the least amount of force necessary to accomplish the mission. If someone strays into a pepper ball, then that’s on them.”

    One shudders to think what Bovino thinks is excessive for la migra. With his powers now radically expanded, we’re about to find out.

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    Gustavo Arellano

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  • How Trump pressures the world into burning more oil and gas

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    The world was on the brink of a climate milestone: adopting a global carbon tax for the shipping industry. Countries had spent years crafting the plan, hoping to throttle planet-warming pollution from cargo vessels. They had every reason to think the measure would pass when the International Maritime Organization met in mid-October.

    Enter Donald Trump. After returning to the White House for a second term, the president and his top officials undertook a monthslong campaign to defeat the initiative. The U.S. threatened tariffs, levies and visa restrictions to get its way. A battery of American diplomats and Cabinet secretaries met with various nations to twist arms, according to a senior U.S. State Department official, who asked for anonymity to speak candidly. Nations were also warned of other potential consequences if they backed the tax on shipping emissions, including imposing sanctions on individuals and blocking ships from U.S. ports.

    Under that Trump-led pressure — or intimidation, as some describe it — some countries started to waver. Ultimately, a bloc including the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Iran voted to adjourn the meeting for a year, killing any chance of the charge being adopted anytime soon.

    The U.S. “bullied otherwise supportive or neutral countries into turning against” the net-zero plan for shipping, says Faïg Abbasov, a director at the European advocacy group Transport & Environment. With its intense lobbying at the International Maritime Organization, the Trump administration was “waging war against multilateralism, UN diplomacy and climate diplomacy.”

    At first glance, it might look like the U.S. has exited the climate fight. The president is once again pulling the country out of the Paris Agreement, and he may not send an official U.S. delegation to next month’s COP30 climate summit in Brazil. But don’t be confused: America is still in the arena; it’s just fighting for the other side.

    Since his return to Washington, Trump has used trade talks, tariff threats and verbal dressing-downs to encourage countries to jettison their renewable energy commitments (and buy more U.S. oil and liquefied natural gas in the process). Just 10 months into his second term, the campaign is showing surprising success as key figures and countries increasingly buckle under the determined pressure.

    Trump was elected to implement a “common sense energy agenda,” says White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers. He “will not jeopardize our country’s economic and national security to pursue vague climate goals that are killing other countries.”

    Oil and gas supporters champion the president’s ambition. They say he’s helped reset the global conversation around climate change and given a welcome political opening to banks, corporations and other governments that wanted to back away from some sustainability targets in the face of growing electricity demand. “President Trump is sort of providing the banks, the European Union and others cover for tempering their climate ambitions,” says Tom Pyle, president of the American Energy Alliance, an advocacy group. “He gives these countries the ability to say, ‘Hey, I’m just trying to go along with the United States here. That’s why I’m buying all this LNG.’”

    But in the eyes of environmental advocates and leaders who depend on multilateralism as a means for global climate action, Trump is unfairly asserting his will on a world that’s running out of time to rein in emissions and avert the worst consequences of global warming. “They’re clearly casting a much wider net to the climate destruction than they did the first time,” says Jake Schmidt, a senior strategic director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “They have more people engaged in it, and they obviously had more time to plan for it.”

    The strong-arming is happening on multiple fronts. Among the biggest is trade, where Trump has already compelled Japan, South Korea and the EU to pledge to spend on American energy and energy infrastructure. Japan, for instance, agreed to invest $550 billion on U.S. projects, and talks are underway to steer some of that funding to a $44 billion Alaska gas pipeline and export site. South Korea has pledged roughly $100 billion in U.S. energy purchases.

    The EU, meanwhile, has vowed to spend some $750 billion buying American energy, including LNG, to secure lower tariffs on its exports to the U.S. Analysts have questioned whether those sales will fully materialize, since they’d require Europe to more than triple its annual energy imports from the U.S. But the public commitment by itself was a stunning move for a bloc that’s led the world in pushing policies to combat climate change — including by setting binding targets for slashing planet-warming pollution, establishing a “green deal” plan to shed fossil fuels and slapping a tariff on carbon-intensive imports.

    Trump administration officials have seized on the U.S.-EU trade deal to urge other changes. For instance, Energy Secretary Chris Wright is pressuring the bloc to relax curbs on the methane footprint of imported gas. The EU is already easing corporate sustainability requirements so fewer companies are compelled to limit their environmental harms, a retrenchment that came after pressure from Germany and other European stakeholders as well as the White House.

    Meanwhile the administration has been goading the International Energy Agency to shuffle its leadership and urged the agency to reinstate forecasts that show a rosier outlook for fossil fuel demand. It has pressed multilateral development banks to prioritize fossil fuels over climate adaptation and clean energy projects when their financing of those green initiatives has become critical given widespread foreign aid cuts.

    And Trump himself has berated countries that aren’t falling in line. In a September speech to the United Nations General Assembly, he chided nations for setting policies around what he called the “hoax” and “con job” of climate change, warning that they can’t be “great again” without “traditional energy sources.” He’s also told UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to reject wind turbines and embrace the North Sea’s oil riches.

    It’s a marked acceleration from term-one Trump. During his first four years in the White House, Trump’s “energy dominance” agenda amounted to rally cries of “drill, baby, drill” and slow steps to encourage more domestic oil and gas production. This time around, the president’s approach has global reach — and far fewer limits. And when it comes to international agreements relating to energy and climate, “the U.S. has an interest in divide and rule, and thus breaking the potential for cooperation,” says Abby Innes, an associate professor in political economy at the London School of Economics.

    Whether or not U.S. officials attend COP30 in November, the U.S. president’s influence will loom large. “Countries like Saudi Arabia feel emboldened by Trump to promote fossil fuels,” says Linda Kalcher, founder of the Strategic Perspectives think tank and a veteran of the annual UN climate summits. One European diplomat said the main goal now at COP30 is just to avoid being bullied.

    To be sure, other countries haven’t followed the U.S. exodus from the Paris Agreement, and the deployment of clean energy is still soaring globally. Even tax incentive phaseouts and project cancellations in the U.S. are only slowing, not stopping, the country’s adoption of wind and solar power. And while multinational companies may be dialing down their green rhetoric, analysts say many are still quietly cleaning up their supply chains and operations to keep selling in California, Europe and other places demanding more sustainability.

    And in a perverse twist for a U.S. president who’s decried the world’s reliance on China, other nations are increasingly linking arms with Beijing as they bid for zero-emission energy tech. “When it comes to dealing with China, whether it’s countries or companies, politicians and executives tell me: ‘Better the devil that you know,’” says Ioannis Ioannou, an associate professor at the London Business School whose research focuses on sustainability and corporate social responsibility. “It offers more stability than the Trump administration.”

    Dlouhy and Rathi write for Bloomberg. Bloomberg’s Jack Wittels and John Ainger contributed to this report.

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    Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Akshat Rathi

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  • Trump says China will work with him to stop fentanyl trafficking

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    During the final leg of his Asia trip en route to South Korea, President Donald Trump spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One, expressing confidence in his relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping ahead of their meeting at an economic summit. 

    Asked about U.S. efforts to curb fentanyl trafficking, Trump said the issue would be central to his discussions with Xi.

    Ahead of his meeting with the Chinese leader, Trump said he hoped for progress on “a lot of problems,” including fentanyl trafficking, trade and tariffs.

    “China is going to be working with me, okay,” Trump told reporters. “They’re going to be working with me, and we’re going to do something, I believe.”

    U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during the APEC CEOs Luncheon at the Gyeongju Arts Center on October 29, 2025 in Gyeongju, South Korea.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    TRUMP PREDICTS ‘VERY HAPPY’ OUTCOME AHEAD OF FACE-TO-FACE WITH CHINA’S XI AFTER TARIFF THREATS

    Trump said the issue would be a major topic of discussion in his upcoming meeting. 

    “We have to have the meeting — a meeting tomorrow. That’s a big meeting,” he said. “And fentanyl will be one of the things that we’re discussing. The farmers will be discussing a lot of things, but fentanyl will be one of the things we discuss.”

    Trump stated that the fentanyl crisis and drug trafficking across the southern border are directly related, calling them “tremendous amounts of death.”

    “We took in tremendous amounts of death. I call them the boats of death,” he said. “Under Biden and open borders, stuff was flowing. I think they killed 300,000 people last year — fentanyl drugs coming through the southern border. And now nobody gets through this. We’re very tough on the border.”

    Border patrol agents and a special operations group member from the Texas Ranger Division

    Border patrol agents and a special operations group member from the Texas Ranger Division seize 297 pounds of marijuana following a drug bust by the Mexico-U.S. border in the Rio Grande Valley sector, near McAllen, Texas, (Loren Elliott/Reuters)

    TRUMP AND KIM JONG UN SHOULD MAKE ‘BOLD DECISION’ TO MEET DURING HIS ASIA TRIP, SOUTH KOREAN OFFICIAL SAYS

    Trump credited his policies with a sharp reduction in illegal drug trafficking by sea, saying it was “down about 80% by water.”

    He also praised U.S. law enforcement and border officials for their efforts, saying, “Our border agents, our Border Patrol agents, they’ve been amazing. ICE — these people do such a great job with what they’re doing.”

    Attendees applaud as U.S. President Donald Trump

    Attendees applaud as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during the APEC CEOs Luncheon at the Gyeongju Arts Center on October 29, 2025 in Gyeongju, South Korea.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    During his visit, Trump also commented on international security issues, including the Israel-Hamas conflict and North Korea’s recent missile launches. He said he expects his meeting with Xi to be productive, adding, “I think we’ll get a great meeting with President Xi of China. And a lot of problems are going to be solved.”

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    Trump’s comments underscored his push to link border security and international cooperation as key priorities ahead of his meeting with Xi.

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  • Walz repeats debunked claim that Trump considers White House ballroom ‘top priority’

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is facing criticism for claiming that the Trump administration’s top priority is the $250 million construction of a new ballroom to replace the East Wing of the White House, as the government shutdown nears its first month.

    On Monday, Walz announced a plan to provide $4 million in emergency funding to support food shelves while blaming President Donald Trump and Republicans for the ongoing shutdown. 

    He cited comments made by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

    “They are choosing not to fund these programs … and when the White House press secretary said the top priority is the ballroom, we could not disagree more,” Walz said.

    FROM THE GILDED OVAL OFFICE TO A NEW MONUMENT: A LOOK AT TRUMP’S RENOVATION PROJECTS

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz repeated a claim that the Trump administration’s main priority is the construction of a multi-million ballroom in the White House amid the ongoing government shutdown.  (Abbie Parr/AP Photo)

    However, Leavitt’s remarks came when a reporter asked whether Trump was considering other renovations or major projects at the White House aside from the ballroom and Rose Garden patio.

    “Not to my knowledge, no, but he’s a builder at heart — clearly — and so his heart and his mind are always churning about how to improve things here on the White House grounds,” Leavitt said. “But at this moment in time, of course, the ballroom is really the president’s main priority.”

    The Republican National Committee said Walz was “shamelessly continuing Democrats’ lie about Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.”

    East Wing of the White House

    An excavator works to clear rubble after the East Wing of the White House was demolished on October 23, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Eric Lee/Getty Images)

    On Tuesday, Leavitt posted on X: “Stop lying, Tampon Tim.”

    Fox News Digital has reached out to Walz’s office for comment.

    SPRAWLING NEW $250M WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM TO BE PAID FOR BY TRUMP AND DONORS

    Other Democrats have also accused Trump of prioritizing the ballroom rather than issues important to voters. 

    “The Trump administration just declared that erecting a ballroom is the President’s main priority,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., wrote on X in response to Leavitt’s remarks. “Meanwhile. The cost of living is way too high and the Republican healthcare crisis threatens millions of Americans.”

    PolitiFact, a fact-checking website that rates the accuracy of claims by elected officials, noted that his statement was false. 

    white house ballroom

    A McCrery Architects rendering provided by the White House of the new ballroom. (The White House)

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    The construction of a new formal ballroom has become a political lightning rod, despite the cost being financed jointly by Trump and private donors, not taxpayers.

    The new ballroom will accommodate approximately 650 seated guests and will stay true to the White House’s classical design, Leavitt said in July.

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  • Shutdown crushes small business owners as losses hit billions — industry leaders beg Congress for ‘clean CR’

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    FIRST ON FOX: Small business owners are losing billions in funding due to the government shutdown, with industry leaders publishing a letter Monday demanding lawmakers pass a “clean CR” and reopen the federal government. 

    “On behalf of our organizations representing millions of entrepreneurs and small business owners, we are calling on U.S. Senators to put an end to the instability and hardship by passing a clean continuing resolution, which will allow negotiations to continue on spending measures moving through Congress, including the future of the COVID credits that will expire at year-end,” a letter addressed to U.S. senators across the board and first obtained by Fox News Digital states. “The viability of thousands of small businesses is at risk due to the shutdown, and it is unacceptable that the livelihoods of owners and their employees are being sacrificed for spending demands that can be resolved through regular order.” 

    The letter was signed by six industry groups, including the Family Business Coalition, International Franchise Association, Job Creators Network, National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors, National Restaurant Association and the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council. 

    The government shut down Oct. 1 after Senate lawmakers failed to reach a funding agreement before a midnight deadline. Leaders of both political parties have since cast blame for the shutdown on each other, with Republicans arguing Democrats sought taxpayer-funded medical benefits for illegal immigrants in their legislation, while Democrats have denied the accusation and claimed Republicans won’t join the negotiation table on healthcare for citizens. 

    GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN 101: WE’VE BEEN HERE BEFORE, HERE’S WHAT HAPPENS NEXT

    A sign reading “The U.S. Capitol Visiting Center is closed due to a lapse in appropriations” is displayed at the entrance of the U.S. Capitol Visiting Center.  (Probal Rashid/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    The letter urged lawmakers to reopen the government while pointing to a handful of examples of how Americans are suffering due to the shutdown, including small business owners losing out on billions in funding. 

    “According to the (Small Business Administration), 4,800 small businesses have been blocked from receiving $2.5 billion in capital since the start of the shutdown,” the groups warned. “Every day the shutdown continues means another 320 small businesses will not have access to the SBA-backed commercial loans these businesses were counting on for expansion and growth. Hundreds of thousands of workers are impacted by the suspension through furloughs, reduced jobs and wages, along with missed opportunities for local economies.”  

    The Small Business Administration released data earlier in October showing 320 small business owners have lost $170 million in funding each day due to the shutdown, which has resulted in at least $2.5 billion in funding that cannot be delivered to business owners. 

    White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers told Fox Digital that the “Democrat shutdown” has caused “chaos” that is gripping business owners no matter the size of the company. 

    SHUTDOWN IGNITES STRATEGIST DEBATE: WILL TRUMP AND GOP PAY THE POLITICAL PRICE IN 2026?

    Trump listens during UK news event

    The White House slammed Democrats for the ongoing shutdown that will cause the National Nuclear Security Administration to furlough 80% of its staff.  (Getty Images)

    “From Wall Street to Main Street, the Democrat shutdown has generated unnecessary chaos and economic uncertainty. Millions of small businesses and entrepreneurs have made it very clear — it is time for Senate Democrats to pass the clean continuing resolution, reopen the government, and stop using Americans as ‘leverage’ for their radical policies,” Rogers said. 

    The letter added that disruptions to air travel and air traffic controller shortages have affected business owners and consumers, alike, and that small business owners are feeling the pinch of “ever-increasing costs and diminishing choices” as they relate to healthcare coverage. 

    SOCIAL SECURITY, AIRPORTS, FOOD STAMPS: HOW ARE YOU AFFECTED DURING A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN?

    Man grocery shopping

    A coalition of six business groups urged Senate lawmakers to reopen the government while pointing to a handful of examples of how Americans are suffering due to the shutdown, including small business owners losing out on billions in funding.  (Liao Pan/China News Service via Getty Images)

    “With respect to the rising cost of health insurance premiums, small businesses have been the hardest hit by years of ever-increasing costs and diminishing choices. Premium tax credit expiration represents only a fraction of the reason why many small businesses are seeing hefty premium increases for next year. Lowering costs and increasing affordable choices will be resolved through comprehensive reforms that need to be addressed by Congress and state legislatures. Congress must commit to this important task as well,” the letter stated. 

    “The effects of the shutdown will only grow wider with each passing day unless the Senate acts. Passing a clean CR is a smart, responsible, and bipartisan course of action. It will provide certainty for small business owners, employees and workers who are counting on actions from their elected officials that produce certainty and stability. We urge every Senator to support a clean CR that allows the appropriations process to move forward to ensure the federal government remains open and operational,” the letter said. 

    The shutdown currently does not have an end in sight. Democrats such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer are taking issue with Trump traveling to Asia this week to meet with foreign leaders. 

    “Americans deserve a government that works as hard as they do — not a leader that flies away from responsibility at the time they need one most,” Schumer said Friday. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, when asked about Schumer’s remarks, told the media Monday that “President Trump has entrusted us to fix this because this is an Article I branch problem.”

    “The president tried his best, he brought them in before all this madness started, and Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries effectively told him to jump in the Potomac,” Johnson said, CBS News reported. “So it’s up to the Democrats, everybody knows that. The president said he’ll meet with them on any issue under the sun. We’re delighted to talk about it, but they have to get the government reopened first.”

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  • Trump administration asks the Supreme Court to allow it to fire head of US Copyright Office

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    The Trump administration on Monday asked the Supreme Court to allow it to fire the director of the U.S. Copyright Office.The administration’s newest emergency appeal to the high court was filed a month and a half after a federal appeals court in Washington held that the official, Shira Perlmutter, could not be unilaterally fired.Nearly four weeks ago, the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit refused to reconsider that ruling.The case is the latest that relates to Trump’s authority to install his own people at the head of federal agencies. The Supreme Court has largely allowed Trump to fire officials, even as court challenges proceed.But this case concerns an office that is within the Library of Congress. Perlmutter is the register of copyrights and also advises Congress on copyright issues.Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in his filing Monday that despite the ties to Congress, the register “wields executive power” in regulating copyrights.Perlmutter claims Trump fired her in May because he disapproved of advice she gave to Congress in a report related to artificial intelligence. Perlmutter had received an email from the White House notifying her that “your position as the Register of Copyrights and Director at the U.S. Copyright Office is terminated effective immediately,” her office said.A divided appellate panel ruled that Perlmutter could keep her job while the case moves forward.”The Executive’s alleged blatant interference with the work of a Legislative Branch official, as she performs statutorily authorized duties to advise Congress, strikes us as a violation of the separation of powers that is significantly different in kind and in degree from the cases that have come before,” Judge Florence Pan wrote for the appeals court. Judge Michelle Childs joined the opinion. Democratic President Joe Biden appointed both judges to the appeals court.Judge Justin Walker, a Trump appointee, wrote in dissent that Perlmutter “exercises executive power in a host of ways.”Perlmutter’s attorneys have argued that she is a renowned copyright expert. She has served as register of copyrights since then-Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden appointed her to the job in October 2020.Trump appointed Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to replace Hayden at the Library of Congress. The White House fired Hayden amid criticism from conservatives that she was advancing a “woke” agenda.

    The Trump administration on Monday asked the Supreme Court to allow it to fire the director of the U.S. Copyright Office.

    The administration’s newest emergency appeal to the high court was filed a month and a half after a federal appeals court in Washington held that the official, Shira Perlmutter, could not be unilaterally fired.

    Nearly four weeks ago, the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit refused to reconsider that ruling.

    The case is the latest that relates to Trump’s authority to install his own people at the head of federal agencies. The Supreme Court has largely allowed Trump to fire officials, even as court challenges proceed.

    But this case concerns an office that is within the Library of Congress. Perlmutter is the register of copyrights and also advises Congress on copyright issues.

    Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in his filing Monday that despite the ties to Congress, the register “wields executive power” in regulating copyrights.

    Perlmutter claims Trump fired her in May because he disapproved of advice she gave to Congress in a report related to artificial intelligence. Perlmutter had received an email from the White House notifying her that “your position as the Register of Copyrights and Director at the U.S. Copyright Office is terminated effective immediately,” her office said.

    A divided appellate panel ruled that Perlmutter could keep her job while the case moves forward.

    “The Executive’s alleged blatant interference with the work of a Legislative Branch official, as she performs statutorily authorized duties to advise Congress, strikes us as a violation of the separation of powers that is significantly different in kind and in degree from the cases that have come before,” Judge Florence Pan wrote for the appeals court. Judge Michelle Childs joined the opinion. Democratic President Joe Biden appointed both judges to the appeals court.

    Judge Justin Walker, a Trump appointee, wrote in dissent that Perlmutter “exercises executive power in a host of ways.”

    Perlmutter’s attorneys have argued that she is a renowned copyright expert. She has served as register of copyrights since then-Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden appointed her to the job in October 2020.

    Trump appointed Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to replace Hayden at the Library of Congress. The White House fired Hayden amid criticism from conservatives that she was advancing a “woke” agenda.

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  • Project 2025 has stalled: tracker

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    The Trump administration’s implementation of Project 2025 has stalled, according to an online tracker.

    A website created by two Reddit users says the number of policies outlined in the conservative document that the White House has implemented has decreased in the last few months. The website does not provide the methodology it uses to track Project 2025.

    Newsweek reached out to the White House and the Heritage Foundation by email to comment on this story outside of normal business hours.

    Why It Matters

    Project 2025 is a 900-page document of policy proposals spearheaded by the Heritage Foundation think tank. It advocates limited government, border security and tough immigration laws, among other conservative measures.

    It was a source of debate before the election, with Democrats accusing Trump of planning to implement it if he won. Before the election Trump called parts of it “ridiculous and abysmal.” But after he won, he told Time in an interview that he disagreed with parts of it, but not all of it.

    What To Know

    According to the tracker, the rate at which the objectives outlined in the document have been implemented is now in decline. As per information provided by the tracker, between January and July, 13 objectives were completed on average per month. But since August, an average of one policy objective per month has been implemented.

    Overall, Trump has enacted almost half of Project 2025 (48 percent) including budget cuts at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

    The tracker said that the document has a total of 318 objectives and that 119 have been completed while 66 are in progress.

    Fifty of these objectives were completed in January in the earliest days of Trump’s new administration and the most recently approved plan, on October 5, was approving the Amble Road Project, a proposal for a 211-mile industrial access road to facilitate the development of four mines.

    Faith Williams, the director of the effective and accountable government program at nonpartisan independent watchdog the Project On Government Oversight, told Newsweek: “The President has come a long way from saying he has ‘nothing to do with Project 2025’ last year, to referring today to his budget chief, Russ Vought, as ‘”‘of PROJECT 2025 FAME.’ Regardless of how closely past, current, and future policies hew to Project 2025, it’s clear that this administration shows no signs of slowing down in its efforts to shift how the federal government serves the public, including weaponizing the Department of Justice, deploying troops in our cities, and denigrating whistleblowers.”

    What People Are Saying

    California Governor Gavin Newsom’s press office wrote on X: “Trump tried to distance himself from Project 2025. But 9 months in, he has already put 48 percent into action. And now, with his shutdown, he’s all in—embracing the plan’s disastrous cuts and divisive policies.”

    Adrienne Cobb, one of the tracker’s creators, told The Cut: “I don’t think the absence of progress on these goals can be interpreted as an unwillingness to complete them.”

    Trump, on Truth Social this month: “I have a meeting today with Russ Vought, he of PROJECT 2025 Fame, to determine which of the many Democrat Agencies, most of which are a political SCAM, he recommends to be cut, and whether or not those cuts will be temporary or permanent. I can’t believe the Radical Left Democrats gave me this unprecedented opportunity. They are not stupid people, so maybe this is their way of wanting to, quietly and quickly, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN! President DJT”

    What Happens Next

    On Thursday, Trump met with Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russ Vought, one of the document’s authors, to decide where to make government cuts.

    Regardless of its pace, Project 2025’s influence on federal workforce structure, agency priorities, and the role of presidential power is expected to remain a point of debate in the lead-up to the 2026 midterms and beyond.

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  • Former Archivist of the U.S. gives East Wing origin story – WTOP News

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    It’s possible that for generations of Americans this past week will be remembered for when the East Wing of the White House was demolished to make way for President Donald Trump’s $300 million ballroom.

    This photo provided by the U.S. Library of Congress shows the East entrance of the White House, Washington, in 1906.
    (U.S. Library of Congress via AP)

    U.S. Library of Congress via AP

    This photo provided by the U.S. Library of Congress shows a crowd outside the White House on the wedding day of Jessie Woodrow Wilson, daughter of President Wilson who married Francis Bowes Sayre, in a White House ceremony in Washington, Nov. 25, 1913.
    This photo provided by the U.S. Library of Congress shows a crowd outside the White House on the wedding day of Jessie Woodrow Wilson, daughter of President Wilson who married Francis Bowes Sayre, in a White House ceremony in Washington, Nov. 25, 1913.
    (U.S. Library of Congress via AP)

    U.S. Library of Congress via AP

    Liz Carpenter, press secretary and staff director for first lady Lady Bird Johnson, poses for a photo in her office in the East Wing
    Liz Carpenter, press secretary and staff director for first lady Lady Bird Johnson, poses for a photo in her office in the East Wing of the White House in D.C., Dec. 9, 1963. On the walls are her Theta Sigma Phi Headliner Award and two photos of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson.
    (AP Photo/Harvey Georges, File)

    AP Photo/Harvey Georges, File

    President Bush waves as walks away from the East Wing of the White House
    President Bush waves as walks away from the East Wing of the White House to the neighboring Treasury Building for the swearing-in of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, July 10, 2006 in Washington. At right is Chief of Staff Joshua Bolton.
    (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

    AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File

    First lady Laura Bush, left, meets with U.N. Special Adviser on Burma Ibrahim Gambari in her East Wing office
    First lady Laura Bush, left, meets with U.N. Special Adviser on Burma Ibrahim Gambari in her East Wing office of the White House in Washington, Dec. 17, 2007.
    (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

    AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File

    The East Wing hallway of the White House is decorated for the holiday season,
    The East Wing hallway of the White House is decorated for the holiday season, Nov. 29, 2016, in Washington.
    (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

    AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File

    Kamala Harris, Janet Yellen, George Akerlof
    Vice President Kamala Harris participates in a swearing-in ceremony with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Yellen’s husband George Akerlof, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2021, at the White House in Washington. The Treasury building stands behind.
    (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

    AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

    A Marine White House Military social aide holds the door to the East Wing entrance of the White House during a press preview of the White House holiday decorations, Monday, Nov. 29, 2021, in Washington.
    (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    AP Photo/Evan Vucci

    White House Holidays
    The entrance to the East Wing of the White House is decorated for the holiday season during a press preview of holiday decorations at the White House, Monday, Nov. 28, 2022, in Washington.
    (AP/Patrick Semansky)

    AP/Patrick Semansky

    Work continues on the demolition of a part of the East Wing of the White House, Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025,
    Work continues on the demolition of a part of the East Wing of the White House, Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025, in Washington, before construction of a new ballroom.
    (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

    AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

    white house demolition
    Work begins on the demolition of a part of the East Wing of the White House, Monday, Oct. 20, 2025, in Washington, before construction of a new ballroom.
    (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    AP Photo/Evan Vucci

    APTOPIX White House Demolition
    Work begins on the demolition of a part of the East Wing of the White House, Monday, Oct. 20, 2025, in Washington, before construction of a new ballroom.
    (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    AP Photo/Evan Vucci

    It’s possible that for generations of Americans, this past week will be remembered for when the East Wing of the White House was demolished to make way for President Donald Trump’s $300 million ballroom.

    While for some it may seem like both the East and West wings have been a part of the Executive Mansion since President John Adams moved in back on Nov. 1, 1800, the truth is both the East and West Wings were built to accommodate the large family of the president who officially named the mansion, The White House.

    A little over 100 years after Adams made Pennsylvania Avenue home, Theodore Roosevelt realized with his six children, he was going to need more room upstairs in the Executive Mansion and to move his “home office” someplace else.

    Colleen J. Shogan, the 11th Archivist of the United States, told WTOP that the 26th president needed to expand the West Wing for office space and The East Wing was more for socializing.

    “They started to welcome more and more visitors to the White House for formal events and needed a place for the carriages to drive up, and then eventually, when cars were in place,” Shogan said.

    While Thomas Jefferson had an east and west colonnade built at the Executive Mansion, it was not until Teddy Roosevelt that a structure was built.

    The next change for the East Wing would take place 40 years later while Teddy Roosevelt’s cousin was commander in chief.

    “The East Wing we know today occurred under Franklin Roosevelt,” Shogan said. “The East Wing actually was modernized and there were two floors built.”

    Shogan, who also served as senior vice president of The White House Historical Association, said along with being the place you would enter when visiting the White House on a tour or for a formal event, the space also included a workspace.

    “There’s the calligraphy office, the Office of the First Lady, the Office of the Social Secretary for the White House, and then numerous other historic sites as you make your way into the main mansion,” Shogan said.

    One of the amenities that presidents have loved for decades was also housed in the East Win: the White House Family Theater, which also served another purpose.

    “Even in modern days it turned into a coat room,” Shogan said. “There was simply no other place to store such a high volume of coats when people come for a state dinner or another formal event at the White House.”

    It was not until 1977 that the East Wing became the home for the first lady’s office, thanks to former first lady Rosalynn Carter.

    Shogan believes the purpose that the East Wing serves is why so many Americans were upset by the images and videos last week.

    “Americans really love their first ladies,” Shogan said. “They may, may or may not like the president, but first ladies are usually given different status in American cultural memory.”

    Shogan told WTOP she heard the White House Historical Association did preserve photography of the East Wing before it was demolished and was there to assist with preservation of the portraits and other historic items.

    “There’s a lot of things that are owned by the White House, that are not on display,” Shogan said. “So, they have excellent storage for preservation and conservation purposes.”

    Shogan served as archivist until President Donald Trump dismissed her this past February. She is now the president and CEO of nonprofit In Pursuit.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • The White House: A cherished American landmark

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    In its 225-year history, the White House has seen a lot. If these walls could talk, they’d have plenty to say, as an entire arm, the East Wing, has been torn off to make room for President Trump’s ballroom. 

    Satellite images show the White House before (left) and after demolition of the East Wing. 

    Planet Labs PBC/AP


    Change has always been a part of the White House’s story. First lady Jacqueline Kennedy said as much during her famed televised tour of the mansion in 1962: “The house will always grow, and should,” she said. 

    In 1792, George Washington chose Irish-born James Hoban’s simple yet elegant design, in a competition that also included an entry by Thomas Jefferson.

    1792-hoban-design-of-white-house-ap-92010101471.jpg

    This drawing by architect James Hoban won the competition to design the presidential residence in 1792.

    AP Photo


    Our second president, John Adams, became the first chief executive to live there. In the mantel of the State Dining Room, Adams’ words are inscribed: “I pray heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this house and all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof.”

    john-adams-blessing-carved-into-state-dining-room-mantel.jpg

    CBS News


    But only 14 years later, the British set fire to the White House during the War of 1812. 

    In 2014, then-curator William Allman showed “Sunday Morning” the remaining burn marks – “scorching that would have happened when flames were drawn out through open windows and doors, and licked up around the tops of the stone,” he said.

    white-house-history-burn-marks.jpg

    In 2014 Mo Rocca examined burn marks from the War of 1812 that remain at the White House, with then-curator William Allman. 

    CBS News


    It was reconstructed in just three years.

    In 1889, first lady Caroline Harrison complained that ‘the rats have nearly taken the building.” She also proposed a major expansion. But her grandiose vision never got past the drawing board.

    East and West Wings were added in 1902. Seven years later, the rotund William Howard Taft added the Oval Office. 

    By 1948, the White House was in danger of collapsing. It would’ve been cheaper to level the place and rebuild it. But President Harry Truman decided that preserving the exterior walls was crucial to the country’s sense of continuity. Instead, the interior was entirely gutted. Truman also added a balcony, an alteration which provoked an outcry. 

    demolition-of-east-wing.jpg

    In October 2025 the East Wing was demolished, despite President Trump saying construction of his planned ballroom would not interfere with the current building. 

    CBS News


    The latest alteration by President Trump is much more significant. The East Wing has been demolished, with critics saying that in doing so Mr. Trump has broken a promise that the new construction would not interfere with the current building, and the planned 90,000-square-foot ballroom is nearly double the size of the main house. The president himself has estimated it will cost $300 million, to be paid for, he says, by private donations. 

    The White House isn’t a private home. Nor is it just some government building. It’s the “people’s house.” No surprise any major change will have people asking a lot of questions.

         
    For more info:

         
    Story produced by Jay Kernis. Editor: Steven Tyler.

         
    See also:

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  • Trump’s White House Trolls Democrats With Some Choice Website Updates

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    Upon navigating to WhiteHouse.gov, the official website for the happenings and history of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, users are met with a banner at the top of the page, “Democrats Have Shut Down the Government,” it reads, with an active timer tick-tick-ticking away, counting, to the second, how long the shutdown has been going on.

    Of an estimated 1.4 million government workers, roughly half are considered essential workers, and are currently performing their jobs without pay, while the other half have been furloughed. The government isn’t working at capacity, and the executive branch would like you to know exactly who they’d like to blame.

    Apparently, online trolling falls under the “essential” category, as a longstanding page about the White House grounds’ history was updated recently with renderings and statements about Donald Trump’s demolition and rebuild of the East Wing to make way for a very large ballroom, as well as a timeline of “major events” in the building’s history.

    The events highlighted on the page make sense at first, beginning with George Washington selecting the future site of the White House in 1791, the 1814 burning of the building and subsequent rebuilding, and so on. It’s mostly porticos and additions from there, welcoming the Rose Garden and the Briefing Room to the party, until you scroll to 1998, when the definition of “major events” takes an abrupt turn in the first entry after Richard Nixon’s bowling alley addition in 1973.

    “Bill Clinton Scandal: President Bill Clinton‘s affair with intern Monica Lewinsky was exposed, leading to White House perjury investigations,” the caption beneath an archival photo of Clinton and Lewinsky in the Oval Office reads. “The Oval Office trysts fueled impeachment for obstruction.”

    The next entry takes us to 2012’s “Muslim Brotherhood Visit,” describing President Barack Obama (informally referred to only as “Obama”) hosting members of “a group that promotes Islamist extremism and has ties to Hamas” and describes it as a terrorist organization.

    Lest you think the timeline is all scandal, users next see a recap of the biggest, most memorable headline to come out of 2020. If you think that’s the Covid-19 pandemic, try again. Of course, it’s Melania Trump’s South Lawn tennis pavilion, which “unifies the tennis court, Children’s Garden, and Kitchen Garden, enhancing recreational opportunities for First Families.” If that’s not major, it’s hard to say what is.

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    Kase Wickman

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  • Where is debris from the White House East Wing demolition being taken?

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    A red and gray scrap hauler pulled out of the White House gates Friday morning, filled with remnants of the felled East Wing. Mangled rebar sprouted above the truck bed’s rim. 

    The truck trundled through the streets of Washington, D.C., down Pennsylvania Avenue, past an exit for Nationals Park and then north along the Anacostia River. Uneven pavement jostled free bits of White House rubble in its wake. 

    A worker clears rubble after the East Wing of the White House was demolished on Oct. 23, 2025 in Washington, DC. 

    Eric Lee / Getty Images


    This week, demolition crews finished razing the East Wing and corridor that connected it to the White House residence. An upgraded walkway and 90,000-square foot ballroom will eventually take their place. 

    Construction began last month with heavy equipment cycling in and out of the White House’s east and south grounds. 

    For decades, the East Wing housed White House offices, workspace for First Ladies and served as a formal entrance for White House guests attending State Dinners or Christmas parties. 

    President Biden Hosts State Visit For French President Macron At White House

    File: Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine, arrives to attend a state dinner in honor of French President Emmanuel Macron and Brigitte Macron hosted by President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden at the White House, on Thursday, Dec. 1, 2022.

    Sarah Silbiger / CNP / Bloomberg via Getty Images


    It was built in 1902, during the Theodore Roosevelt administration and completed in the 1940s.

    screenshot-2025-10-24-at-6-16-14-pm.png

    File: First lady Jacqueline Kennedy gives CBS News’ Charles Collingwood a tour of the White House in 1962.

    CBS News Archives


    Jacqueline Kennedy gave CBS News a tour of the White House complex in 1962. “I think this house will always grow and should,” Kennedy told CBS News correspondent Charles Collingwood. She described making changes to the furnishings as a slow process that required expert input and advisory board approvals – to preserve history.

    Rosalynn Carter, White House office

    File: Rosalynn Carter with her personal assistant, Madeline McBean. March 17, 1977.

    White House photo, National Archives


    President Trump’s privately funded construction project appears to be sailing ahead with less scrutiny.

    The White House said historical components of the East Wing — like former First Lady Rosalynn Carter’s original office — have been saved and are likely to get a new home. 

    USA - Architecture - East Garden of the White House

    File: The East Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C. The Garden is based on a traditional 18th century American garden. 

    Brooks Kraft LLC/Corbis via Getty Images


    But Kennedy’s garden was removed amid the demolition, sources said. 

    Some dirt from the grounds has been taken to Hains Point parkland that sits on the Potomac River, just across from Ronald Reagan National Airport. The White House said some of construction debris, like wood and plants, may be sent to nurseries, through the National Park Service.

    White House East Wing Demolition Continues For Trump Ballroom Construction

    Golfers play hole five as trucks unloads debris and soil from the demolition of the White House’s East Wing at East Potomac Golf Course, on Hains Point Island, on Oct. 24, 2025, in Washington, DC. 

    Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images


    The red and gray truck carrying bits of the East Wing crossed from D.C. into Maryland and exited the highway. It entered Smith Industries, a vast scrap yard that sits next to railroad tracks. 

    Trucks carrying discarded siding, crushed cars and rusted appliances buzzed around the lot. Hard-hatted workers on forklifts zigzagged among the trucks. 

    Hydraulic claws hoisted heaps of twisted refuse into one machine. Another ran at full whir, spitting out bite-sized pieces that could be sold and eventually recycled. 

    The truck pulled onto the scale, headed toward the debris field and disappeared from view.

    About 40 minutes later, after dropping off its load and a bit of history, the truck drove away from the yard. 

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  • Democrats twist words on ballroom as Trump top ‘priority’

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    As images of the White House’s demolished East Wing led the national news, top Democrats shared a video of White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt seeming to say that construction of the new ballroom is President Donald Trump’s top priority.

    “At this moment in time, of course, the ballroom is really the president’s main priority,” Leavitt said in a five-second clip that leading Democrats, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., shared on X.

    Jeffries’ Oct. 23 post decried Leavitt’s comment: “The Trump administration just declared that erecting a ballroom is the President’s main priority. Meanwhile. The cost of living is way too high and the Republican health care crisis threatens millions of Americans.”

    Sharing the same clip, the House Democratic Caucus wrote Oct. 23 on X, “So, Trump’s MAIN priority is a $300 MILLION ballroom? Not lowering costs. Not saving health care. Not reopening the government. Got it.”

    And the Democratic National Committee’s X account shared a photo of Leavitt overlayed with a quote reading, “The ballroom is the president’s main priority.”

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    The clip of Leavitt’s statement is real, but Jeffries and the House Democratic Caucus clipped her comments in a misleading way that removes the context: Leavitt never said the ballroom is a more important priority for the president than inflation, health care or ending the federal government shutdown. 

    As one wing of the iconic white structure was being turned to rubble nearby, reporters at an Oct. 23 White House briefing questioned Leavitt about the project.

    In the clip Democrats shared, Leavitt was responding to a question about Trump’s priorities on White House construction, not about all policies.

    Here’s the question that prompted Leavitt’s answer, and her response:

    Reporter: In addition to the ballroom and the Rose Garden patio, is the president looking at any other renovations or significant kinds of projects here at the White House?

    Leavitt: Not to my knowledge, no, but he’s a builder at heart, clearly. And so, his heart and his mind is always churning about how to improve things here on the White House grounds. But at this moment in time, of course, the ballroom is really the president’s main priority.

    We contacted Jeffries’ office and the Democratic Caucus on Oct. 23 and Oct. 24 and received no replies. As of publication, the X posts by Jeffries and the caucus remained on the X platform.

    When we contacted the White House, the press office referred us to an Oct. 23  X post by an official White House account, Rapid Response 47.

    That post reshared an Oct. 23 X post by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., that was similar to Jeffries’. The Rapid Response 47 account said Leavitt “was answering a question specifically about construction projects on the White House grounds.” The Rapid Response 47 post also included the transcript of the question to Leavitt and her answer.

    Schumer’s post had reshared a post by Acyn, an account that shares raw video on politics and is affiliated with the liberal MeidasTouch media company. The video shared by Acyn included the reporter’s full question and Leavitt’s full answer, but it summarized the exchange in a misleading manner, with a caption that read, “Leavitt: At this moment in time, the ballroom is really the president’s main priority.” 

    Our ruling

    Jeffries wrote, “The Trump administration just declared that erecting a ballroom is the President’s main priority,” rather than issues such as the cost of living and health care.

    This twists Leavitt’s words. She was asked about Trump’s top priorities for renovating parts of the White House campus. In that context, she said the top priority is the ballroom, not that the ballroom is Trump’s top priority among every policy.

    We rate the statement False.

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  • Big tech is helping to pay for Trump’s ballroom that we all definitely want

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    The federal government has released a list of all of the entities helping to pay for President Trump’s lavish White House ballroom, . Big tech is all over this thing, with companies like Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta and Microsoft all shelling out cash to fund the 90,000-square-foot ballroom.

    It’s not just big tech. Defense firms are also helping to pony the bill here. Companies like Lockheed Martin and Palintir are sending some cash, as are random billionaires like the Winklevoss twins and Domino Sugar magnate José Fanjul. The list reads like a who’s who of the ultra wealthy and connected.

    As we all know, giant corporations and billionaires are kind and selfless, but what if just this one time they want something in return for their largesse? Columbia professor of law Richard Briffault told Time have done “significant” business with the federal government, raising ethical concerns.

    “I doubt it’s a literal quid-pro-quo, but it’s probably more like ‘if you give this, I will look favorably upon you.’ Or maybe more like, ‘if you don’t give this, after you’ve been asked, I won’t [look favorably upon you],” Briffault said. “It’s greasing the system by making contributions, and in some ways, his leaning on them for contributions is quasi-coercive.”

    Noah Bookbinder, CEO and President of ethics watchdog organization said the whole thing is “extraordinarily unusual, deeply disturbing and does have tremendous ethics implications.” He also said that “Donald Trump has made very clear over the years that he does appreciate people paying tribute to him, and he does tend to do things that benefit those people.”

    Trump has been personally woo-ing these potential financiers. There was a fundraising dinner in the East Room last week that included representatives of several of the aforementioned companies. The dinner was billed as an event to “Establish the Magnificent White House Ballroom,” . The outlet also reported that Trump has held meetings at the White House and at his club in Virginia to raise money for the project.

    It’s worth noting that this isn’t the first time big tech companies have banded together to pay tribute to Trump. Most of the aforementioned companies and, heck, Apple CEO Tim Cook for some reason.

    The construction of this glorious ballroom we all most definitely want has already been at the heart of several controversies. Americans were recently surprised to find that the East Wing of the White House , despite the president previously promising the ballroom would not even touch the actual property.

    In any event, we’ll soon be able to watch live feeds of the ultra rich dancing the night away to the Village People or whatever, which is sure to solve all of our problems. In unrelated news, food stamps are likely to run out next week for around 41 million Americans and .

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    Lawrence Bonk

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  • ‘Boots’ Creator Andy Parker Didn’t Set Out to Make “Woke Garbage”—or Military Propaganda

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    “I guess we have to give some credit to the Pentagon there, don’t we?” says Andy Parker, cheekily. His Netflix series Boots—which follows a closeted teen in the 1990s as he enlists in the Marines—has surged to the top of the streamer’s charts since its release on October 9, peaking earlier this week as the No. 2 most-watched series on the platform. That might have something to do with the fact that the Pentagon released a statement on October 16 shading Boots, calling it “woke garbage.”

    “Under President [Donald] Trump and Secretary [Pete] Hegseth, the US military is getting back to restoring the warrior ethos. Our standards across the board are elite, uniform, and sex neutral because the weight of a rucksack or a human being doesn’t care if you’re a man, a woman, gay, or straight,” said Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson. “We will not compromise our standards to satisfy an ideological agenda, unlike Netflix whose leadership consistently produces and feeds woke garbage to their audience and children.”

    Andy Parker attends a “Boots” screening and conversation at SAG-AFTRA Foundation Robin Williams Center on October 06, 2025 in New York City.

    Dominik Bindl/Getty Images.

    “I would be very surprised if the Pentagon actually watched the show,” Parker says in response. But whether or not Trump or Hegseth have streamed the queer-boot-camp series, perhaps after a long day of very heterosexual activities like remodeling the White House and trying to make the military more buff, the administration slamming Boots has apparently only made it more popular. (Spoilers below.)

    “The premise itself instigates or incites some kind of reaction or assumptions,” says Parker of Boots. “What I would invite people to do is to watch the show, and see how they feel about the questions the show is trying to provoke.”

    The irony is that in an alternate universe, Parker might have been a drill instructor reporting to Hegseth. “I had been this closeted gay high school kid, and had invited a Marine Corps recruiter to my house to talk with my parents about why I should go join the Marines,” Parker tells me over Zoom. “I was very actively seeking that.” He ultimately decided not to enlist—“I was running away from myself”—but with Boots, he’s getting to experience what might have been.

    “There was a personal connection to the idea of a gay kid running off to join the Marines and not really understanding what that was going to do for him, or where that was going to ultimately lead him,” Parker says. “It felt like this was the road not taken. This is a path I could have gone on. How would I have done?”

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    Chris Murphy

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  • 10/23: The Takeout with Major Garrett

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    NBA player and coach among 30+ arrested in investigations into gambling, sports rigging; High early voting turnout in 2025 elections.

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