Legality of Trump's $400M in private funding for White House ballroom at issue [View all]
A federal judge weighing whether the project may proceed has focused on whether the administration can use private donations to bypass congressional approval.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/02/09/trump-ballroom-judge-ruling
A federal judge is expected to soon rule on whether President Donald Trumps planned $400 million White House ballroom project can proceed, zeroing in on whether the administrations plan to rely on private donations allows it to bypass congressional approval.
Trump has argued that the approach spares taxpayers the expense, but the dispute has instead highlighted a lack of transparency over how the project is being financed. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, congressional Democrats and watchdog groups have questioned an arrangement that relies on donations from corporations with business before the federal government, funneled through a nonprofit intermediary that stands to collect millions of dollars in fees, to fund the most significant alteration to the White House in decades.
Leon has said he may rule this month on the National Trust for Historic Preservations challenge to the project. As the decision approaches, watchdog groups have scrutinized the administrations fundraising effort, arguing that it exploits gaps in federal disclosure rules that Congress should tighten......
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) concluded that at least 22 companies involved in the ballroom project should have disclosed their donations in lobbying filings but did not.
The public deserves real transparency around who is contributing and how much they are giving, but that is not what we are seeing, Matt Corley, CREWs chief investigator, wrote in an email.
Those concerns also have been taken up by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts), who has pressed the Trust for the National Mall a nonprofit that is managing donations for the White House ballroom project to clarify its role and specify the donations it has received. In a letter sent to Warren and shared with The Post, the organization declined to offer details about the gifts, but said that it stands to collect between 2 and 2.5 percent of each donation as part of its management fee. The planned $400 million project would be the largest in the organizations history.
The trump ballroom deal smells. I am glad that the courts are looking at it