Internal contractor estimates reveal that President Donald Trump’s East Wing replacement project carries a price tag far exceeding what he has told the public – with taxpayers footing most of the bill.
The Washington Post obtained a project summary prepared for the White House by contractor Clark Construction in early March that estimated the total construction cost at $600 million — $200 million more than the maximum figure Trump has ever cited publicly.
The documents also show that roughly $307 million of that total was projected to come from federal agencies funded by taxpayers, including the Secret Service and the White House Military Office, while only $293 million was expected to come from private sources.
When the project was first announced in July 2025, the White House said private donors would cover the entire $200 million cost. As estimates climbed — to $270 million, then $478 million, then $600 million — Trump’s public statements never kept pace, and his insistence on full private funding never wavered.
“This is taxpayer-free,” Trump said on March 31. “We have no taxpayer putting up 10 cents.”
By that date, the Post reported, federal agencies had already approved more than a dozen payments to Clark Construction totaling tens of millions of dollars in public funds.
Contracting and procurement experts who reviewed the documents for the Post said some government spending on security features falls within normal bounds. The Secret Service and White House Military Office routinely fund security infrastructure at the White House complex. But they drew a clear line at what the documents appear to show — taxpayer money flowing into the ballroom structure itself.
“You can’t disentangle the entertainment space from all of the other parts that are in here,” said Stan Soloway, a former Pentagon acquisition official. “It’s one structure.”
A former General Services Administration official was more blunt about the use of Secret Service funds for demolition of the original East Wing, telling the Post: “That is a stretch. How is that something Secret Service should do and fund?”
Construction has faced numerous legal and political challenges. A historic-preservation lawsuit prompted a court injunction pausing above-ground work in March, while seven Republican senators joined Democrats to block a $400 million legislative authorization for the project.
“I think that’s the commitment that should be kept,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME).
The White House did not answer questions about the discrepancies, and Clark Construction declined to comment, calling all project details confidential.
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