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Seeing Is Believing: Kennedy Center Board Removed Trump's Name, Right?

We know the Kennedy Center Board filed that Donald Trump's name had been removed. But are we the only ones who want to see it for ourselves?



Article Summary

  • Kennedy Center officials filed that Donald Trump’s name was removed, but the tarped facade has many demanding proof.
  • Judge Christopher Cooper ruled only Congress can name the Kennedy Center and ordered Trump signage taken down.
  • A D.C. appeals panel rejected Trump’s last-minute stay bid, leaving the Kennedy Center hours to comply.
  • Reports say workers removed letters overnight, and court filings claim Trump’s name is off the building and site.

So, here's where things stand. After a number of last-ditch efforts to stop the move, Donald Trump's name was officially removed from the Kennedy Center building very early on Saturday morning… right? We all saw the crew on the scaffolding, and we saw the tarp go up to block the signage from view and filming. We know that an image and a video seemingly show one of the letters being removed. We even had the Kennedy Center board confirm, in a court filing, that his name has been removed. Except… here's the thing. With the tarp still up and security guards still on site, I need to actually see that it's gone with each passing minute. It's not that I don't believe a court filing from someone associated with the Trump Administration. Okay, that's actually one of the very big reasons why maybe we need to see Trump's name gone for ourselves to make sure no one is trying anything shady – what with this being Trump's birthday weekend and all.

Kennedy Center
Image: C-SPAN Screencap; Shutterstock.com

ORIGINAL REPORT & UPDATE: Just before May wrapped up, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper handed the Trump Administration two major legal losses regarding its attempts to rename the Kennedy Center to the ego-stroking "The Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts," and its efforts to shutter it for two years. First up, Judge Cooper ordered Kennedy Center officials to remove Trump's name from the building within two weeks, citing the 1964 federal law that prohibits anyone but Congress from changing the center's name. "Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it," Cooper wrote in his finding. In addition, Cooper granted a request for a preliminary injunction to temporarily block Trump from taking further action toward closing the center. Well, those two weeks wrap up today, and although some changes have been made and scaffolding is in place to restore the Kennedy Center to its rightful name, Donald Trump's lackeys aren't giving up without a fight.

Kennedy Center Board Removes Trump's Name in Time for His Birthday
Images: C-SPAN Screencaps; CBS Entertainment

While a whole lot of folks await on any number of livestreams, Judge Cooper denied a request to stay his ruling on Thursday, noting that steps had already been taken to comply with the ruling – undercutting the Kennedy Center board's case. "These efforts undermine the notion that Defendants face irreparable harm in complying with the order in full," Cooper wrote. At this point, the only hope Trump has is that the D.C. Circuit Court grants the Justice Department's (yup, Trump's politicizing the Justice Department again) request for a stay. Except that didn't happen – with a three-judge appeals court panel giving a thumbs-down to Trump's last-ditch effort to keep his name illegally on the building, a little after 7 pm ET on Friday, meaning the Kennedy Center board had five hours remaining before it would be in violation of the law. And as the day neared its end, the crew was back out, getting the scaffolding up to pop those letters off and get the center back to its legal name.

Kennedy Center Finally Removes Trump's Name in Time for His Birthday
Image: C-SPAN Screencap

But wait! Trump's personal Justice Department filed for a 12-hour extension to have Trump's name removed from the building – which it hadn't been by the time it was ordered to be removed by judge's order. Trump's lawyers claim that the work "has been delayed because of thunderstorms … presented safety concerns for workers." To be clear, the Kennedy Center Board had up to two weeks to comply with Judge Cooper's ruling. The wall would eventually be tarped off as Trump's last-ditch effort to the moment for the hundreds who waited in lines for hours, with The Washington Post and The New York Times both reporting that the letters were removed.

"Workers spent about eight hours on Friday building towering scaffolding in front of the section of the facade bearing Mr. Trump's name. Then, in the early hours of Saturday, they hung heavy white tarps from the structure. It obscured views of the removal, which was a significant symbolic victory for opponents of Mr. Trump's takeover of an iconic performing arts center," read the NYT piece. "But a gap in the tarps allowed a New York Times photographer to observe a worker pulling the letter "A" from the wall. There was no sound of power tools; the letter appeared to come off by hand."

On Saturday, Trump's legal team officially filed with the court, claiming that it had "removed signage 'that purports to rename the Kennedy Center after President Trump.'" Here's a look at the legal filing from the Kennedy Center Board, confirming that Trump's name had been removed from the building:

Kennedy Center/Trump: Judge Cooper's Initial Ruling

Judge Cooper ruled that the Kennedy Center board's decision in March to close the center was "based its decision on an insufficient, one-sided presentation of information and neglected to consider the full range of its statutory obligations and potential adverse consequences of closure on programming and memorial functions." The renovations are allowed to move forward, but regarding closing the center, Judge Cooper noted that the board should "come to this decision anew after independently balancing its multiple obligations to the Center in a prudent fashion."

In response, Trump took to his version of social media to rant against the judge's decision. Believing he should be "ashamed of himself," Trump claims that "Judge Cooper and the Radical Left would rather see it [Kennedy Center] DIE than have President Trump transform it into something that everyone could be proud of, much as I have done, in many cases, throughout my life" (though he doesn't explain why the name of the center would need to be changed for the facility to be renovated. As for what his plans are now, moving forward, Trump is sounding a little dejected: "I cannot be involved with a situation where danger to the Public is allowed to flourish in plain and open sight."


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Ray FlookAbout Ray Flook

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought onto the core BC team in 2017.
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