Trump's grand ballroom project APPROVED

On Thursday, a significant review board greenlit President Donald Trump’s ballroom project, despite its entanglement in legal uncertainties.

The National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC), one of two authoritative bodies overseeing the project, granted near-unanimous approval during its recent meeting.

Phil Mendelson, the Democratic Chairman of the D.C. City Council, was the sole dissenter, expressing concerns that the ballroom’s size was excessive. Meanwhile, two other commissioners opted to vote ‘present.’

In response to the decision, Trump shared a picture of himself at the construction site on Truth Social Thursday night, signaling his approval of the development.

Ahead of the commission’s decision, NCPC Chair Will Scharf, who also serves as President Trump’s Staff Secretary, defended the necessity of the ballroom and the group’s approval process.

During the meeting, Scharf read aloud several critical reviews from prominent publications, including the New York Times and the Washington Post.

He then revealed that they referred to past White House projects, including President Teddy Roosevelt’s construction of the West Wing and President Richard Nixon’s build-out of the briefing room. 

‘Sky’s fallen pronouncements from so-called historic preservationists and their allies in the press are therefore nothing new to the history of the White House,’ he said. 

President Donald Trump posted a picture of himself standing next to the ballroom construction site as he cheered the National Capital Planning Commission’s vote Thursday to approve the ballroom project 

National Capital Planning Commission Chairman Will Scharf (right), flanked by NCPC commissioner James Blair (left), a White House Deputy Chief of Staff, appear at Thursday’s meeting where the ballroom project was approved 

‘I believe that in time, this ballroom will be considered every bit as much of a national treasure as the other key components of the White House,’ Scharf added. 

Mendelson asked the group to pump the brakes on Thursday’s vote, arguing the process was too rushed. 

He said he wasn’t against the construction of a White House ballroom. 

‘It’s just – I’m trying to be nice here – it was just too much. It’s just too large,’ Mendelson said. 

Linda Argo, an appointee of Washington, D.C.’s Democratic Mayor Muriel Bowser, said she agreed with Mendelson’s comments. 

Mendelson was the project’s one no vote, while Argo and Arrington Dixon, who was also appointed by Bowser, voted present. 

The vote comes as the ballroom is already in legal jeopardy. 

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon ruled the construction on the ballroom needed to be halted within two weeks, siding with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which had argued Trump needed to seek Congressional approval for the project. 

In his decision, Leon said the Trust would likely be victorious in court, as no statute ‘comes close’ to giving the President the authority to make such major changes to the White House.

President Donald Trump shows off the latest plans for the White House ballroom during an Air Force One flight on Sunday night. Those plans were approved by the National Capital Planning Commission on Thursday, with only one no vote 

Work continues on the White House ballroom on Wednesday. On Monday, a federal judge gave the White House two weeks to comply to a ruling in which he said work needed to stop – unless needed for national security reasons – while a ballroom lawsuit makes its way through court 

A rendering of what President Donald Trump’s proposed ballroom will look like. There have been a number of design changes since the orignal designs were shared

The White House ballroom addition juts out far into the South Lawn. Both architects and average Americans were concerned about the ballroom’s massive size 

 ‘The President of the United States is the steward of the White House for future generations of First Families. He is not, however, the owner!’ Leon wrote.

The only construction that could continue on the project had to be relevant to the security of the White House, Leon said. 

‘It is not too late for Congress to authorize the continued construction of the ballroom project,’ the judge also wrote. ‘The President may at any time go to Congress to obtain express authority to construct a ballroom and to do so with private funds.’ 

On the heels of Leon’s orders, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that he had no plans to put the project before Congress. 

Public Citizen’s Jon Golinger, who was leading a small protest in front of the NCPC on Thursday, ahead of the vote, told the Daily Mail that more lawsuits could be filed to stall the ballroom project. 

Golinger, who got into a spat with Scharf at the group’s March meeting over the NCPC chair’s credentials to lead the planning group, said that the issue remained outstanding. 

He said that Scharf and other White House staffers, James Blair and Stuart Levenbach, all Trump appointees to the NCPC, didn’t have the requisite experience to be in their positions. 

Trump packed both the NCPC and the Commission of Fine Arts, which fast-tracked the ballroom vote in February, with aides and allies ahead of the October demolition of the East Wing. 

Public Citizen’s Jon Golinger (right) led a protest outside the headquarters of the National Capital Planning Commission against President Donald Trump’s ballroom project 

Protesters hold up signs outside the National Capital Planning Commission headquarters on Thursday ahead of a meeting where President Donald Trump's ballrom project will get a vote

Protesters hold up signs outside the National Capital Planning Commission headquarters on Thursday ahead of a meeting where President Donald Trump’s ballrom project will get a vote

‘If the three of them vote for this project, and those votes push this thing through. I think they make it very legally vulnerable to challenge,’ Golinger argued. 

All three voted in the affirmative.  

Trump shared new designs for the ballroom – which showed that the controversial ‘stairs to nowhere’ had been removed – to reporters Sunday night aboard Air Force One. 

Golinger argued that this could create legal problems because it shows the design isn’t fully baked. 

‘They didn’t present this new project with a legitimate, legally required notice for this meeting today. So I also would suggest that if they vote to approve a project that wasn’t actually calendared today, they’re putting themselves in legal jeopardy,’ Golinger said. 

Scharf appeared to give the group legal cover by having the NCPC vote on the amended design plans ahead of the final approval vote. 

All NCPC members voted in approval, with Mendelson voting present. 

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