MS NOW95%
Federal judge rules Trump’s name must be removed from Kennedy Center 23%
By Steve Benen98%
5/29/2026, 7:09:54 PM
Topics: Maddowblog, Politics
BS Summary: This article contains 23 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Appeal to Emotion, and Confirmation Bias, with Biased Writer Voice as the most egregious example at 42.7% saturation with 271 hits. Analysis detected 1,364 faulty-reasoning hits from 635 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 36.3% and a BS Rank of 23% (12,982 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 77.20% of the article peer group.
Donald Trump has probably grown accustomed to losing important legal fights, but as this week comes to an end, the president has suffered back-to-back setbacks in court.
On Friday morning, a federal judge blocked the administration from moving forward with its $1.776 billion compensation fund, which has been panned by members of both parties as a “slush fund,” and then on Friday afternoon, a different federal judge blocked a separate effort to add Trump’s name to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
U.S.
District Court Judge Christopher Cooper said in a 94-page ruling, “The Kennedy Center’s organic statute makes crystal clear that the Center is to be named for President Kennedy, and it cannot bear any other formal name or public memorial based on the Board’s unilateral say-so.
Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it.”
The president’s allies apparently tried to convince the judge the rebranding was little more than adding an informal nickname, but Cooper, an Obama appointee, didn’t buy it.
From the ruling:
The rechristening is not, as Defendants suggest, like calling the “Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection” the “Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,” which is merely a clerical rearrangement.
Nor is it akin to calling the Federal National Mortgage Association “Fannie Mae,” which, as even the Defendants admit, is simply a “play on the pronunciation of its acronym.”
The administration’s efforts to alter the names of other institutions — calling the Department of Defense the “Department of War,” for example — are beside the point.
Most fundamentally, none of these examples implicate a presidential memorial that was legislatively intended to honor a specific public figure.
The “Trump Kennedy Center” label adds an entirely new name to the Center’s formal title and relegates President Kennedy’s name to second place.
If that is not a renaming, what is?
The problem began in earnest late last year when Trump’s handpicked allies, mindful of his obsession with self-glorification, claimed shortly before Christmas that they’d renamed the John F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, adding the Republican incumbent’s name to the venue.
One day later, the president’s operation managed to acquire the materials, arrange the crews, secure the equipment and began the work of installing Trump’s name on the arts center’s façade.
Ever since, the text on the wall has read, “The Donald J.
Trump and the John F.
Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts.”
Democratic Rep.
Joyce Beatty of Ohio, an ex officio member of the center’s board who was excluded from voting on the name change, quickly filed suit, arguing not only that the process was improper, but that the entire gambit was illegal for the simplest of reasons: A name change required congressional approval, and that had not happened.
Cooper agreed, writing, “The Kennedy Center must be named for, and is meant to honor, President Kennedy alone.”
As part of Friday’s order, which almost certainly will be appealed, ordered the administration to remove all physical signage and all other official documentation within 14 days.
He also declared that Beatty must have voting rights as an ex officio member of the board.
If that weren’t enough, Cooper also blocked Trump’s appointees from closing the Kennedy Center’s doors on July 5 for planned restoration efforts in which the president has taken a keen interest.
“Today’s ruling rightly affirms that this administration’s efforts to rename and close the Center have no basis in law,” Beatty said in a statement.
“The Kennedy Center is an institution that belongs to the American people, not to Donald Trump.
He has desecrated this sacred memorial for his own vanity.
I am proud to have fought for the rule of law and to protect this sacred institution.”
The president was far less pleased.
Analysis
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