Politics

Trump’s Tackiest White House Change Yet Spotted Ahead of Birthday Bash

DONALD’S CIRCUS

The president’s birthday preparations are transforming the White House into an oversized event venue.

President Donald Trump’s flashy makeover of the White House for his tacky birthday spectacle is in full swing.

The White House, already a construction zone eyesore due to the president’s $400 million ballroom project, began looking more like an oversized event venue on Monday as crews prepared for the UFC extravaganza Trump is throwing on June 14 to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday and his own 80th.

A section of the UFC Freedom 250 stage during assembly on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 25, 2026. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
Trump has high hopes for his birthday bash, telling reporters he expects 5,000 spectators to watch the UFC fights at the arena, seen here under construction. “I think it’s gonna be the biggest event we’ve ever had at the White House,” he said earlier this month. Nathan Howard/REUTERS

Photos captured two cranes assembling a massive metal arch with mounted lighting fixtures near the White House’s Executive Residence, a structure the UFC teased in a rendering released Friday.

The rendering depicts a sprawling arena erected beneath the arch, along with cheering spectators, oversized patriotic imagery, an American flag with just 48 stars, and the White House in the background.

Work continues on the construction of the ballroom at the White House and a UFC cage on the South Lawn.
The UFC arena’s construction, combined with the 79-year-old’s ongoing $400 million White House ballroom blitz, has turned the White House grounds into an eyesore. Jose Luis Magana/AP

Photos taken on Monday also captured two more cranes working on the ballroom in the background, underscoring just how extensively Trump has transformed the White House grounds into a construction site.

A section of the UFC Freedom 250 stage during assembly on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 25, 2026. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
UFC CEO Dana White expressed worries last week that the staging lights would attract swarms of bugs. Nathan Howard/REUTERS

Dana White, UFC CEO and Trump’s MAGA buddy, has said that no taxpayer money is being used for the event, with the UFC and its parent company, TKO Group Holdings, reportedly covering costs now projected to exceed $60 million, according to USA Today. TKO Group is expected to take a net loss of about $30 million, Benzinga reports.

The White House and the UFC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

White complained last week that the event could be derailed by a bug infestation at the White House.

“President Trump just opened the Rose Garden two nights ago, and he invited me to dinner there. The amount of gnats that were flying around. I’m like, ‘Holy s--t,’” White said on the Boardroom podcast.

“As soon as I got on the plane, I called my head of production and said, ‘Yeah, let me tell you about the gnat situation tonight,’” the 56-year-old continued. “So when you’re a fighter, think about that lighting grid, the amount of power in the lights… moths, gnats, and God knows what else.”

White said he suggested installing fans around the venue because “gnats have a hard time in the wind.”

U..S. President Donald Trump gestures at the site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ballroom in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 19, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Republican operatives are worried that Trump's many construction projects are more than just a blight on the property, sending a message to Americans amid surging prices and an affordability crisis, worsened by Trump’s war on Iran. Kevin Lamarque/REUTERS

Trump has high hopes for his birthday bash, telling reporters he expects 5,000 spectators to watch the UFC matches at the arena. “I think it’s gonna be the biggest event we’ve ever had at the White House,” he said earlier this month.

The UFC arena and the ballroom are only two of the many renovation projects Trump has set in motion across the nation’s capital.

The president tore out the grass in the historic Rose Garden and paved over it last summer as part of the broader Mar-a-Lago-style makeover of his temporary residence. The new patio was on display during an Easter event, albeit with patches of fake grass rolled out to enliven the cement floor.

Elsewhere, he has revamped the West Wing Colonnade, adding a “Presidential Walk of Fame” to the walkway, and redecorated the Oval Office to feature significantly more gold. The Lincoln Bathroom has also been renovated in Trump’s preferred style, and is now made entirely of marble, which he described as “very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln and, in fact, could be the marble that was originally there!”

Trump has also added his name to the Kennedy Center and the Institute for Peace, hung up banners featuring his face at the Department of Justice and other government buildings, and has plans to build a 250-foot Triumphal Arch near Arlington National Cemetery.

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