Trump on
the Shabby Condition of the Reflecting Pool: Not My Fault
President
Trump said the blooms of green algae and the peeling polyurethane had nothing
to do with the rushed $16.4 million makeover he had ordered.
Luke
BroadwaterMaxine Joselow
By Luke
Broadwater and Maxine Joselow
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/22/us/politics/trump-reflecting-pool-blame.html
June 22,
2026
President
Trump knows one thing for sure about the sorry state of the Lincoln Memorial
Reflecting Pool: It’s not his fault.
Speaking
to reporters on Monday during an event that was supposed to have been about
quantum computing, Mr. Trump said the enormous blooms of green algae and the
peeling polyurethane had nothing to do with the rushed $16.4 million makeover
he had ordered. Instead, he laid out in vague terms a series of events that he
claimed were responsible for the highly embarrassing breakdown of a Washington
landmark.
To hear
Mr. Trump tell it, the renovation was going perfectly until vandals armed with
knives and fertilizer set their sights on the century-old pool, which stretches
between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.
“They
put, somebody said, fertilizer in the water,” Mr. Trump said. “If you put
fertilizer in the water, you get algae. But somebody said they might have put
fertilizer. They did something to create the algae.”
Experts
on the pool have said the stagnant, shallow water is a petri dish for algae,
and that duck droppings and phosphate in the water already act as natural
fertilizer.
Of the
large strips of polyurethane spotted floating in the water, Mr. Trump said
somebody had sliced the pool with “probably a box cutter or a knife of some
kind.”
“I can’t
help it if somebody goes in with a knife and starts hacking it up,” he said.
Katie
Martin, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, which includes the National
Park Service, said in an email that five people had been arrested on charges of
vandalism, and five others had been issued citations.
The names
of those arrested and cited were not released, so it was impossible to know if
they had actually been accused of dumping fertilizer or slashing the pool. But
David Carter Hearn, 67, a cyclist and three-time Olympian as a canoeist, said
he was arrested on Friday and charged with destroying government property,
which he denies.
He said
he stopped at the site on Friday just to have a look, then reached down to
touch a strip of peeling blue paint mixed with the algae.
“I was
just a curious, concerned citizen,” he said in an interview with The New York
Times. “I guess I was there at the wrong place, wrong time.”
Aside
from his claims of vandalism, the president also lashed out on Monday at former
President Barack Obama for not properly fixing the Reflecting Pool.
Between
2010 and 2012, the Obama administration spent more than $35 million trying to
solve problems with the Reflecting Pool. The project failed. The pool was
matted with green algae within a month of its reopening. It still leaks 16
million gallons of water a year, which the National Park Service must pay to
replace.
“Barack
Hussein Obama, have you ever heard of him?” Mr. Trump snapped at reporters.
The
Reflecting Pool has been troubled for decades by leaks and algae blooms, but
Mr. Trump pledged to fix those problems ahead of the July 4 holiday, even as
some experts warned a quick makeover would not fix the pool’s longer-term
issues. Over the weekend, the president described issues with the project so
severe that the pool would likely need to be partly drained for “necessary
repairs.”
The Trump
administration awarded two no-bid contracts for the Reflecting Pool
renovations, bypassing the legally required process of seeking competitive bids
because of what it called an urgent need to complete the project by July 4.
The first
$14.7 million contract went to a Virginia-based company called Atlantic
Industrial Coatings to spread the waterproofing sealant in the “American flag
blue” shade. The second $1.7 million contract went to Ohio-based Greenwater
Services to install a new water-treatment system.
In a post
on its website on Sunday, Atlantic Industrial Coatings defended its work,
saying the areas with peeling sealant were “a very small part of the massive
7-acre project.” It added that the pool would be drained for further repairs
soon.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.
Maxine
Joselow covers climate change and the environment for The Times from
Washington.

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