domingo, 26 de abril de 2026

Appeals Court Again Allows Ballroom Construction to Go On, for Now

 



Appeals Court Again Allows Ballroom Construction to Go On, for Now

 

In the latest ruling, an appeals court in Washington allowed construction to continue until at least June while it considered the case.

 

Zach Montague

By Zach Montague

Reporting from Washington

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/18/us/politics/trump-ballroom-appeals-court.html

April 18, 2026

 

A federal appeals court on Friday allowed construction on President Trump’s ballroom project to proceed through early June, pausing, for now, a lower court’s order that construction stop after next week.

 

The overnight decision was procedural: An administrative stay gave the court around seven weeks to consider the case more fully. But it was the latest in a series of careful extensions by courts that have each allowed the president to keep building for short stretches as a lawsuit fighting the project proceeds.

 

Last weekend, the same three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit had avoided wading into the case right away. It sent the case back to Judge Richard J. Leon, a Federal District Court judge, to clarify the contours of the case after Mr. Trump complained publicly for weeks that the project includes transformative national security upgrades to the White House.

 

The appeals panel set arguments for June 5, to consider whether to block construction anew. Because of the intermittent extensions, the president has yet to run into a deadline or temporarily bring construction to a halt.

 

 

When Mr. Trump demolished the East Wing of the White House in October, discussion centered on the soaring 90,000-square-foot ballroom he had proposed building in its place. But after Judge Leon questioned the legality of the project, the president quickly pivoted, framing the ballroom as little more than a “shed” for a far more ambitious underground military compound, secretly designed to replace the former Presidential Emergency Operations Center.

 

Last weekend, judges on the same panel wrote they would not second-guess the president’s claims that halting construction could jeopardize a critical security modernization.

 

“This court will not gainsay the importance of ensuring the safety of the White House, the president, staff and visitors,” they wrote.

 

On Thursday, however, Judge Leon explained that his thinking about the project had not changed.

 

Unless Congress authorized Mr. Trump to fundamentally alter the historic White House grounds, he wrote, the new ballroom structure replacing the East Wing could not be built.

 

Judge Leon reasoned that the Trump administration could continue in good faith making necessary security upgrades that the public would never see. But he warned that “national security is not a blank check to proceed with otherwise unlawful activity,” and held firm that Mr. Trump could not use those upgrades as a pretext to rebuild the White House however he wished.

 

He sided with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a nonprofit chartered by Congress that works to preserve historic buildings, which has sued to stop the overhaul of the White House to fit Mr. Trump’s vision.

 

On Saturday, the three-judge appeals court panel wrote it would expedite the case and resolve the merits after both sides submitted their positions throughout May.

 

The panel consists of Judges Patricia A. Millett, an Obama appointee; Bradley N. Garcia, a Biden appointee; and Neomi Rao, a Trump appointee. Last week, Judge Rao wrote in a dissenting opinion that she was already inclined to allow construction to continue uninterrupted during the appeal.

 

Zach Montague is a Times reporter covering the federal courts, including the legal disputes over the Trump administration’s agenda.

Firm Building Trump’s Ballroom Got a Secret No-Bid Contract for a Nearby Job

 



Firm Building Trump’s Ballroom Got a Secret No-Bid Contract for a Nearby Job

 

The National Park Service increased the value of the contract several times over and then awarded it to Maryland-based Clark Construction, in a process that experts said was highly unusual.

 

David A. Fahrenthold Luke BroadwaterAndrea Fuller

By David A. FahrentholdLuke Broadwater and Andrea Fuller

The reporters reviewed dozens of pages of documents about this contract and analyzed other contracts awarded for similar projects.

 

April 25, 2026

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/25/us/politics/lafayette-park-fountains-trump-contract.html

 

To build his mammoth White House ballroom, President Trump last summer chose Maryland-based Clark Construction. Since then, Mr. Trump has repeatedly sung the company’s praises, even saying he wanted it to refurbish projects all over Washington.

 

In January, government documents show, the Trump administration secretly gave the company a no-bid contract to do another job at a sharply inflated price.

 

The National Park Service wanted to repair two ornamental fountains in Lafayette Park, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. The Biden administration in 2022 had estimated the work would cost $3.3 million. But Mr. Trump’s government agreed to pay Clark $11.9 million to do it, and later added tasks that increased the contract to $17.4 million, the documents show.

 

The agency did so without considering offers from other firms, citing a rarely used “urgency” exception to normal open-bidding procedures usually meant for emergencies like war or natural disasters. By law, federal agencies are generally supposed to seek competing bids to find the vendor that provides the best deal.

 

Unlike the ballroom project, which Mr. Trump says will be funded by private donations, the bill for the fountain repairs is being paid by the government.

 

On Friday, Mr. Trump took credit for the repairs. “The first time Lafayette Park Fountains, opposite the White House, have worked in decades,” he wrote on social media. “My Great Honor to have funded this project (and many others!), and helped.”

 

This contract has not been previously reported. The Trump administration did not post it in public databases of federal spending, although agencies are typically supposed to report new contracts within three business days.

 

The New York Times obtained internal Park Service documents showing how the contract was awarded. Contracting experts said those documents revealed that the government had repeatedly used unusual procedures to bypass competition for the project and increase the price it expected to pay.

 

The Park Service, for instance, added more than $1 million to the contract’s cost estimate by accounting for inflation. Twice.

 

“They just took the cover page of my estimate and just added a bunch of money onto it,” said Stephen J. Kirk, an independent consultant who had estimated the cost of the fountain repairs for the National Park Service in 2022. “I didn’t add those extra millions on there."

 

The Interior Department, which includes the Park Service, defended the contract but declined to answer specific questions about it.

 

“The way this contract was awarded is above board,” Katie Martin, a department spokeswoman, said in a statement. “The urgency is to ensure this project is done well ahead of America’s 250th anniversary.”

 

Clark Construction has worked for the federal government for more than 80 years. In response to questions from The Times, the firm provided a short statement that did not answer specific questions about the ballroom or the fountain projects.

 

“Our track record reflects the quality of our work and our commitment to integrity,” the statement said. “We bid on work we are qualified to deliver and we follow prescribed procurement processes.”

 

Before last year, Clark had little overt connection to Mr. Trump, and had inked large contracts during Republican and Democratic administrations.

 

Then, last summer, Mr. Trump chose the firm to oversee one of Washington’s largest and most secretive projects.

 

The president’s ballroom plans call for a 90,000 square-foot structure on the former site of the East Wing. He has said it will be paid for by $400 million in private donations, and has declined to list the donors. The Times has identified some of them.

 

The president has also said that he chose the contractors and set their rates, believing the White House grounds to be exempt from contracting rules. But he declined to say how much he was paying them. There have been legal challenges to the ballroom, but a federal appeals court has allowed construction to continue, at least for now.

 

In January, Mr. Trump implied to The Times that Clark had offered to build the ballroom for free.

 

“They said: ‘Sir, we’ll do it for nothing. This is the greatest honor,’” he said.

 

This week, The Times asked the White House if Clark was indeed working for nothing. Taylor Rogers, a spokeswoman, said she had “nothing to add” to the president’s comments.

 

In fact, Clark is being paid for its work on the White House ballroom, according to a person who asked not to be named in order to discuss a sensitive matter.

 

As the ballroom project was getting underway, the National Park Service sought to restart the two 1960s-era fountains in Lafayette Park. They had not worked for nearly a decade because of aging equipment.

 

In theory, this job was nothing like the ballroom project. It was outside the White House grounds, where normal contracting rules were supposed to apply.

 

But soon, government documents show that the Trump administration began taking actions to increase the contract’s price.

 

First, the Park Service estimated that the project would cost an additional 27 percent because of inflation. Then, puzzlingly, the service increased its estimate by another 24 percent, to again account for inflation.

 

By contrast, the best-known benchmark of broader inflation, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index, rose by 16 percent in the same period. A narrower industry-specific index measuring construction prices rose by 21 percent.

 

Then the Park Service increased its estimate by another 50 percent. This time, it attributed the increase to a “schedule compression factor.”

 

Contracting experts said that was unusual, too. They said that it is common to pay contractors more for going faster, but that it is usually done by asking for itemized costs — extra overtime, extra equipment — rather than adding such a large flat fee.

 

“I’ve never heard of such a thing,” Mr. Kirk said.

 

At the same time, the documents show, officials were also building a legal justification to restrict who would be allowed to bid on the newly lucrative job.

 

They found that while Lafayette Park was usually open to the public, it was sometimes closed during White House state dinners, or when foreign leaders stayed at the nearby Blair House. Those occasional closures would stop the fountain repair work. So the Park Service said it would be necessary to hire one of the few contractors cleared to work inside the White House security perimeter.

 

That limited the pool of potential vendors to four, including Clark. The Park Service contacted all of them, according to two people familiar with the contract who asked not to be named because they were not permitted to speak publicly about the matter.

 

But then, Park Service officials reversed course and simply offered the job to Clark. In an internal memo, the Park Service justified that decision by invoking an exemption that allows agencies to bypass competition in urgent cases.

 

The service said the fountains needed to be revamped by May 2026 — at that time, about five months away — to be ready for the country’s 250th birthday. Because Clark already had people and equipment at the White House working on the ballroom, the Park Service said that only that firm was in a position to go fast enough.

 

“The agency need for the supplies or services is so urgent that providing a fair opportunity would result in unacceptable delays,” the agency found, in a memo signed by five Park Service officials.

 

The Park Service has rarely relied on that kind of urgency claim to award no-bid contracts. An analysis of Park Service contracting data by The Times found that over the past decade, less than 1 percent of the agency’s contract spending relied on urgency exemptions.

 

Steven L. Schooner, a professor of contracting law at George Washington University, said that exemption was meant for cases with much more at stake than a birthday party, even one for a country.

 

“No one will die. No one’s quality of life will be diminished. There is nothing urgent about this,” he said. “Self-imposed deadlines aren’t urgency. And lack of planning isn’t urgency.”

 

Earlier this year, The Times reported that the Trump administration had also used the urgency exemption to justify one of several no-bid contracts given to Event Strategies, Inc., which helped organize Mr. Trump’s rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021.

 

Experts said that contract, too, seemed to stretch the definition of “urgency.” The administration wanted someone to provide services for an event celebrating the new “Trump accounts” investment vehicles. The work was urgent, the officials said, because they had decided to do it on short notice.

 

Documents seen by The Times show the Lafayette fountain contract was awarded to Clark in January. In the months after that, the government added new tasks, including landscaping, as well as the addition of new benches and a kiosk. The additions increased the price to more than $17 million.

 

That total makes the contract one of the dozen largest known, by amount paid out during Mr. Trump’s second term, for the National Park Service.

 

In the past, the Park Service had posted details about other contracts related to Lafayette Park: building repair, tree care, and cleaning and waxing the park's many statues.

 

But it has not posted any information about the contract with Clark. The White House referred the question to the Park Service, and the Park Service declined to say why.

 

In January, the Park Service announced that it was hiring contractors to repair broken fountains in nine places around Washington, including Lafayette Park. It treated the Lafayette Park contract differently than the other eight.

 

The Park Service did not use the urgency exemption to rush any of the others along, even though they were all facing similar deadlines. Six of the other contracts were awarded after giving “fair opportunity” to other bidders, government records show, though only one company bid in each case. The other two were given as no-bid contracts under an often-used program for small businesses owned by “socially and economically disadvantaged” Americans. None went to Clark.

 

The Park Service also posted all of the other contracts in public databases. Those records show that the other fountain repairs have each cost less than the Lafayette Park project’s $17 million price tag. It is difficult to compare the costs directly, because each contract involves different tasks.

 

Two other firms that have worked on Washington’s fountains told The Times that, among the city’s many broken water features, the ones in Lafayette Park were considered among the easiest to fix.

 

“As fountains go, it’s not a complicated fountain,” said Dominic Shaw, whose Texas-based company, Waterline Studios, helped refurbish the Lafayette Park fountains in 2007.

 

Other D.C. fountains are decades older, or require workers to deal with complex arrays of nozzles or lights, slabs of hard-to-replace granite, or long cascades of flowing water.

 

The Lafayette Park project consists of two oval-shaped pools, each with two rings that spray a circle of jets upward and toward the center of the ring. On the list of Washington’s fountains, Mr. Shaw said, “it would be at the bottom in terms of complexity.”

 

Lisa Friedman contributed reporting. Kitty Bennett contributed research.

 

David A. Fahrenthold is a Times investigative reporter writing about nonprofit organizations. He has been a reporter for two decades.

 

Luke Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.

 

Andrea Fuller is a data journalist at The Times, using data analysis to make sense of complex topics.

Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips as gunshots were fired at White House | Sunday 26 April 2026

Trump escorted off stage after armed man storms event

‘Extremely frightening’: Wolf Blitzer sees gunman open fire a few feet away

 

Trump evacuated after shots fired at White House correspondents’ dinner – what we know

 



Explainer

Trump evacuated after shots fired at White House correspondents’ dinner – what we know

 

Secret Service says US president and first lady are safe and suspect is in custody after shooting incident in DC

 

 Suspect in custody after Trump evacuated in shooting incident

 

Jenna Amatulli

Sun 26 Apr 2026 04.59 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/apr/25/trump-white-house-correspondents-dinner-what-we-know

 

The White House correspondents’ dinner on Saturday night was upended by gunshots, prompting the immediate evacuation of Donald and Melania Trump.

 

Hundreds of guest including many senior government officials and journalists at the Washington Hilton ballroom hid under tables as US Secret Service agents with guns drawn rushed White House pool reporters out of the room and mentioned “shots fired”.

 

Jeff Carroll, the interim chief of police of the Metropolitan police department, said a suspect “charged a US Secret Service checkpoint” at the Washington Hilton armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives. He appeared to have been a “lone” gunman, he said

 

Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser said the suspect was taken to a local hospital where he was being “evaluated”. “We have no reason to believe at this time that anyone else was involved,” she said.

 

Jeanine Pirro, the US attorney for the District of Columbia, said the defendant has been charged with felony firearms and assault charges.

 

A law enforcement official told the Associated Press that an officer was shot in a bullet-resistant vest, but is expected to be OK. Carroll, the DC police chief, said the investigation was “preliminary” but that investigators believed the suspect did fire a shot. Carroll said the suspect was not shot.

 

Trump rescheduled the dinner, posting on Truth Social later on Saturday: “The First Lady, plus the Vice President, and all Cabinet members, are in perfect condition. We will be speaking to you in a half an hour. I have spoken with all the representatives in charge of the event, and we will be rescheduling within 30 days.”

 

CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer said he was within a few feet of the shooter, and called into CNN to describe his observations. Blitzer said he saw “a very, very serious weapon. He starts shooting, and I happened to have been a few feet away from him. As he was shooting, of course, the first thing that went through my mind: is he trying to shoot me? And I don’t think he was trying to shoot me, but I was very close to him as the gunshots were fired and he was very very scary. But I’m OK, now.”

Suspect identified in White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting incident