The
Latest Place Trump’s Face Will Appear: Some U.S. Passports
The
department said it planned to release “a limited number of specially designed”
U.S. passports that feature a picture of the president to commemorate the
country’s 250th anniversary in July.
Taylor
Robinson
By Taylor
Robinson
April 28,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/us/politics/trump-passports.html
President
Trump’s signature is set to be added to U.S. dollars. His name has been affixed
to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. A plan to mint a
24-karat gold coin with his image is moving forward.
Now there
are plans to release a limited-edition U.S. passport bearing the president’s
likeness.
The State
Department revealed the plans on Tuesday, saying that the new passports would
be made available in commemoration of the country’s 250th anniversary this
summer. A “limited number of specially designed” passports will be released,
according to Tommy Piggott, a spokesman for the State Department. They will be
available for any American citizen who applies for one at the Washington
Passport Agency when the rollout happens and will continue for as long as
inventory lasts, the department said.
Pictures
of the proposed design, which Mr. Piggott said will feature “customized artwork
and enhanced imagery,” show a serious-looking Mr. Trump above his signature in
gold ink.
There
will be no additional cost for the Trump-themed passports, the State Department
said. It is unclear how many will be produced.
News of
the passports was earlier reported by The Bulwark and Fox News.
The
passport redesign is the latest example of the president or his allies pushing
to put his name, image or signature on institutions in Washington and across
the country. This year’s National Parks passes display his face alongside
George Washington’s, and some of his administration’s initiatives, such as
Trump savings accounts for children and TrumpRx, where Americans can buy
prescription drugs directly, are named after him.
Some
proposals have been unsuccessful, like Mr. Trump’s pressure campaign on Senator
Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic minority leader, to rename New York’s
Penn Station for him, in exchange for releasing billions of dollars in frozen
federal infrastructure funds.
Others —
such as adding Mr. Trump’s name to the Kennedy Center and the United States
Institute of Peace — are caught up in litigation.
Michael
Crowley contributed reporting.
Taylor
Robinson covers politics and the New York City metro area as a news assistant
for The Times.


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