No, really: It's now the "The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts"
There are all kinds of coups. Here's one.
In an unprecedented move in February, Donald Trump fired 18 general trustees of the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts (commonly known as the Kennedy Center) who had been appointed by President Biden.
The Kennedy Center, which is the national arts and culture institution, has a board of 36 general trustees, who are appointed by the U.S. president and who serve six-year terms, as specified by law. The board also has some ex-officio members, such as certain cabinet secretaries and holders of other offices. Presidents appoint new general trustees when the terms of existing trustees expire. Never before has a president dismissed trustees without cause or resignation prior to the completion of their terms. Now one has.
Trump replaced the fired Biden-appointed trustees with loyalists. He also appointed himself as one of the trustees. Board members who were appointees from Trump's first term were retained. Ex-officio members in Trump's cabinet were of course also loyal to Trump. Thus Trump gained control of the board. The newly constituted board fired Kennedy Center president Deborah Rutter, and also elected Trump himself as board chairman to replace the previous chairman who had been one of the 18 fired by Trump.
Federal statute specifies the 6-year trustee terms. Whether or not the president can legally execute mid-term removals is a matter of dispute. While the law might not prohibit such removals, norms of conduct, historical precedent, and basic decency do prohibit them, but of course carry no legal weight. The notion that Trump would consider himself bound by norms of conduct and governance long ago became laughable.
(Example: As I write this Trump has ordered 30 ambassadors, all Biden appointees, to leave their diplomatic posts around the world and return home. Basically, they've been fired. These are career diplomats. "A standard tour is three to four years," said the New York Times. "The union representing career diplomats said this was the first time that such a mass recall had taken place of career diplomats serving as ambassadors or chiefs of mission." A union spokeswoman said the method of removal was "highly irregular." Which is to say, an egregious violation of norms.)
Once the dust had settled at the Kennedy Center, Trump had a compliant board of which he himself was chairman, and a compliant president of his choosing. He then proceeded to overhaul the Kennedy Center's programming, which he declared had been too woke. Trump himself had never attended a Kennedy Center performance, not even the annual Kennedy Center Honors gala, which by tradition U.S. presidents have attended. "Prior to 2017," says Wikipedia, "there had been three occasions in which the president did not attend the gala performance [due to pressing matters of state -mb]."
The Kennedy Center was conceived in the Eisenhower years as the country's "national cultural center." Authorized by the National Cultural Center Act of 1958, and opened in 1971, the Center has hosted, according to Wikipedia, "many different genres of performance art, such as theater, dance, classical music, jazz, pop, psychedelic, and folk music. It is the official residence of the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington National Opera." It is sustained mainly through ticket sales and private donations. The federal government pays for building upkeep. The building is administered as a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution.
Since Trump's takeover, the Kennedy Center’s 2025 season has been turbulent, more politicized, and financially weaker than in prior years. Ticket sales and subscriptions have declined, several major artists and productions have withdrawn, and the programming mix has shifted away from some of the more progressive and experimental work that characterized recent seasons. There were waves of staff firings and resignations.
According to The Washington Post, fired president Deborah Rutter had led the Center "through a decade in which it had diversified its offerings, endured the 2020 lockdown and emerged to boast robust ticket sales and, according to publicly available tax filings, steadily grown revenue."
Previously the Center's board had been decidedly bipartisan and apolitical, with a genuine mission to promote the arts as broadly conceived. No more. It's now dominated by Trump loyalists. "Nearly 10 months in," says The Post, "a picture of a transformed institution has come into view. Standbys of the Kennedy Center’s stages like the National Symphony Orchestra have been strained by plummeting ticket sales and organizational uncertainty. Traveling productions and acts have pulled out. And a new kind of right-leaning programming has begun to take root." [links in the original]
The building has gotten an imperial Trumpian makeover too, with new marble (of course) and portraits of the first and second couples hanging in the Center's Hall of Nations. Performance themes are less diverse and artistic, and more patriotic. Trump, says The Post, "routinely refers to the building as 'the Trump Kennedy Center.'"
This year Trump chose himself to host the Kennedy Center Honors, the building’s marquee annual event. He also chose the honorees. "All went through me," Trump said.
Originally named in its authorizing legislation the "National Cultural Center," the Center was renamed the "John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts" in 1964, following the assassination of President Kennedy. President Lyndon Johnson signed the joint resolution renaming it as a living memorial to the slain president, who had supported the center's development through fundraising efforts.
A living memorial. Never one to miss an opportunity to profane the sacred, the always self-aggrandizing Trump has recently bigfooted himself into the Center's formal name. The Center's loyalist board voted on December 18 to rename the storied institution the "The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts," a.k.a. the "Trump Kennedy Center." Because the previous name had the force of law, the board has no legal authority to change it. No matter. The Kennedy Center began updating signage on the exterior of the building the following day. The coup was complete.
We should of course not be surprised by Trump's vainglorious self-exaltation, in this or anything else, because it's long been on continuous display. This is the man who has heavily lobbied without embarrassment for himself to receive the Nobel Peace Price, which is itself surely a moral disqualification. Not achieving that, the U.S. Institute of Peace building in Washington, D.C., became the Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace, announced by the State Department shortly after Trump's Nobel advocacy. According to PBS, "the takeover of the Peace Institute was also anything but peaceful, with his administration seizing the independent entity and ousting its board before actually affixing his name to the building." Sound familiar? Independent entity. Illegal or improper board ouster. Trump takeover and renaming.
Trump has also been long interested in his face appearing on Mount Rushmore, which (thankfully) is almost certainly physically impossible due to geological considerations.
The examples are almost endless. Trump has just announced the construction of a new "Trump class" of naval warships.
As I'm writing this, a New York Times headline says "Trump Takes America’s ‘Imperial Presidency’ to a New Level."
"Nearly 250 years after American colonists threw off their king, this is arguably the closest the country has come during a time of general peace to the centralized authority of a monarch," writes Peter Baker of the Times.
"He no longer holds back, or is held back, as in the first term," says Baker. "Trump 2.0 is Trump 1.0 unleashed. The gold trim in the Oval Office, the demolition of the East Wing to be replaced by a massive ballroom, the plastering of his name and face on government buildings and now even the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the designation of his own birthday as a free-admission holiday at national parks — it all speaks to a personal aggrandizement and accumulation of power with meager resistance from Congress or the Supreme Court." [links and italics in the original]
All this is reminiscent of authoritarian regimes elsewhere, where government is equated with the cult of the leader. In America, we used to believe that we were different, profoundly so. A nation of laws, not men. No ubiquitous portraits of presidents gazing down on us from buildings and billboards, and attaching their names to our institutions even during their tenure in power. We were a different kind of country. A beacon of possibility.
I'm reminded, too, of how it was in the 1990s and early 2000s when Silvio Berlusconi was prime minister of Italy. Back then I imagined the utter embarrassment that country must have felt at being ruled by such a self-evident buffoon. I could never have anticipated that such buffoonery could claim the American presidency, with all its assumptions of competence, dignity, and decency rising in this office above human shortcomings.
Yet here we are.
We have found to our surprise and dismay how much our institutions have depended on fidelity to norms that everybody more or less implicitly agreed to follow (although Mitch McConnell also busted a number of important norms).
Before now we have in very large part not needed to legally specify every minute detail in statute in a way that explicitly anticipates and defends against presidents who act in continuous bad faith. When the law says trustees are appointed to six year terms, we should be able to assume that, barring something extraordinary, they serve six year terms. We ought not even have to argue about whether the specification of term lengths in the statute itself implies that a president cannot normally interrupt those terms. But now we do, thanks to Donald J. Trump. The combination of a rogue president, a compliant Congress, and an enabling Supreme Court has done much damage to our system of governance.
Will that damage endure? The development of an imperial presidency has turned our country's founding principles upside down. What remains is to wonder whether we will learn from this dismal experience and somehow reaffirm and renew our earlier commitments to constitutional governance, the rule of law, and—not least—basic character and decency. Whether or not that happens ultimately depends upon an informed and engaged citizenry. Us. I'm sorry to say that I'm not very hopeful.
Copyright (C) 2025 James Michael Brennan, All Rights Reserved
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