Trump plans to rename White House Ballroom after himself
Summary
- Trump
plans to name the new $300 million ballroom after himself. - Officials
call it “The President aald J. Trump Ballroom.” - Ballroom
will be 90,000 square feet, holding up to 999 guests.
According to ABC News, officials have already dubbed the
expected 90,000-square-foot event venue “The President Donald J. Trump
Ballroom.”
The outlet was informed by senior Trump officials that the
moniker will “probably stick.”
Trump hasn’t revealed the ballroom’s name yet, but when ABC
asked him about it on Thursday, he grinned and responded, “I won’t get
into that now.”
In the United States and other countries, Trump’s name is
already emblazoned on a vast number of structures, golf courses, and
merchandise.
Workers started tearing down the historic East Wing this
week as the government shutdown went on in order to create Trump’s opulent
ballroom, which he said was being funded by private donations.
Before his term ends in 2029, Trump intends to conduct state
dinners and other occasions in the massive gilded ballroom, which will be
55,000 square feet and dwarf the White House.
According to the president, the project’s original $250
million budget has now increased to over $300 million.
He said that his private donors had raised almost $350
million.
Among those mourning Trump’s destruction
of the East Wing, which existed for over a century until being demolished last
week, was the daughter of former President Ronald Reagan.
“The images we’ve now all seen of the East Wing being
demolished are heartbreaking,”
Patti Davis, 73, wrote in a New York Times
opinion essay published Friday.
“Over the centuries, many presidents have
altered the White House, and certainly older buildings need to be updated and
repaired. But this is complete destruction.”
White House spokesperson Davis Ingle previously said the
renovations will benefit future generations.
“President Trump is working 24/7 to Make America Great
Again, including his historic beautification of the White House, at no taxpayer
expense,”
Ingle wrote in a statement.
“These long-needed upgrades will
benefit generations of future presidents and American visitors to the People’s
House – something we should all celebrate.”
How would renaming affect official White House events and
protocol?
Renaming the White House Chamber after President Trump
would substantially affect the sanctioned picking conventions used
in event assignments, programs, and protocols. The chamber’s new name would be
reflected in all formal dispatches and conventional references,
signifying the space as the” Trump Chamber.”
In terms of protocol, sanctioned White House events
held in this chamber would source the renamed venue, which may also serve as an
emblematic assertion of Trump’s heritage and influence. State
feasts, receptions, press briefings, and other formal functions would use the
new chamber name in sanctioned documents and speeches.
Still, the procedures and traditions of White House events
are doubtful to change significantly. The renaming serves largely as a branding
or heritage marker rather than altering security arrangements, seating
plans, or political protocols, which are governed by longstanding
conventions.