DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Trump’s ballroom plans head for a reckoning as legal roadblock looms

March 17, 2026
in News
Trump’s ballroom plans head for a reckoning as legal roadblock looms

Tourists visiting Washington, DC, may be gazing at the barren spot where the East Wing used to exist longer than Donald Trump might like as his plans for a massive ballroom appear to be headed to court.

According to the Washington Post, three Trump loyalists he installed on the National Capital Planning Commission lack the expertise legally required for the position — a vulnerability that could torpedo the entire project or, at minimum, delay it indefinitely.

Federal law explicitly mandates that planning commission appointees possess “experience in city or regional planning.” Historically, these seats have gone to credentialed professionals in planning, architecture, or historic preservation. Trump’s three picks — White House staff secretary Will Scharf, White House deputy chief of staff James Blair, and OMB associate director Stuart Levenbach — have none of that background, according to watchdog groups, former commissioners, and congressional Democrats.

The appointments underscore a troubling pattern across Trump’s second term: filling expert positions with political operatives. The Commission of Fine Arts—the other panel reviewing the ballroom proposal — has been similarly stacked with Trump loyalists, including 26-year-old Chamberlain Harris, his executive assistant whose desk sits steps from the Oval Office.

When Congress established the arts commission 116 years ago, it directed presidents to appoint “well-qualified judges of the fine arts.”

Whether these expertise requirements carry legal weight remains contested. Since taking office, Trump’s Justice Department has argued in multiple court filings that the Constitution grants presidents absolute authority to appoint federal officers with no restrictions.

His opponents reject that interpretation, arguing that replacing credentialed experts with political cronies delegitimizes federal decisions and exposes them to legal challenge. In this case, the tainted appointments could invalidate any vote on the ballroom project.

“Those appointments were not just a crude political power play. They were unlawful, and they destroy the credibility of the vote on this project if those individuals vote for it,” Jon Golinger, democracy advocate with Public Citizen, told the commissioners last week.

A legal analysis by Cultural Heritage Partners—a firm suing the administration over plans to paint the Eisenhower Executive Office Building white—compared appointee qualifications across three administrations. The findings were damning: Biden’s picks included a city planner, architectural historian, and land-use lawyer with county planning board experience. Trump’s second-term slate represented a radical departure from that standard.

“Trump’s second-term appointments represent a major shift,” the analysis concluded.

You can read more here.

The post Trump’s ballroom plans head for a reckoning as legal roadblock looms appeared first on Raw Story.

Samsung stops selling $2,899 TriFold phone after just three months
News

Samsung stops selling $2,899 TriFold phone after just three months

by Los Angeles Times
March 17, 2026

Samsung Electronics Co. is winding down sales of its Galaxy Z TriFold smartphone after roughly three months on the market, ...

Read more
News

Albert Zuckerman, Literary Agent Called the ‘Hero of the Blockbuster,’ Dies at 94

March 17, 2026
News

3 of the All-Time Best Performances by Kendrick Lamar

March 17, 2026
News

Microsoft unifies Copilot under one team and moves Mustafa Suleyman to focus on superintelligence. Read the memos.

March 17, 2026
News

Top housing official asks wedding guests for help with home purchase

March 17, 2026
‘Paradise’ Renewed for Season 3 at Hulu

‘Paradise’ Renewed for Season 3 at Hulu

March 17, 2026
Trump’s Next Target: ‘Taking Cuba’

Trump’s Next Target: ‘Taking Cuba’

March 17, 2026
‘The dominoes are starting to fall’: Trump official’s quitting over Iran jolts followers

‘The dominoes are starting to fall’: Trump official’s quitting over Iran jolts followers

March 17, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026