Trump Makes Emergency Demand to Keep His Name on the Kennedy Center — Gets Rejected Twice — Workers Peel It Off Overnight as Crowds Chant "Take It Down"
On the June 12 deadline to remove Trump's name from the Kennedy Center, the administration filed emergency motions to delay — rejected by Judge Cooper, then rejected again by the D.C. Circuit appeals court at 7:15 PM. At midnight, the name was still up and the board was in contempt. They blamed thunderstorms and asked for 12 more hours. Beatty's attorneys called it "a manufactured emergency" and "gamesmanship." Hundreds gathered on the plaza in 110°F heat, chanting "take it down." A drag queen paraded with bubble machines. Jim Acosta led chants. A double rainbow appeared after the appeals court ruling. One man begged workers: "Start with the T!" At 12:50 AM, tarps went up — the crowd booed, denied the satisfaction of watching. By 4 AM Saturday, workers had pried off the 18 letters spelling "The Donald J. Trump and." It lasted six months. Trump posted he had "no interest" in continuing "what could only be a hopeless journey into NEVER NEVER LAND."