Trump wanders out of White House to give free-wheeling rant in front ballroom construction
C-SPAN 3/screen grab

President Donald Trump stepped outside the White House on Tuesday to survey the sprawling construction site where his prized ballroom is rising from the rubble of the demolished East Wing — and delivered a lengthy, freewheeling tour that touched on drone warfare, Greek architecture, and his place in history.

"This is my gift to the United States of America," Trump told reporters as he gestured at the concrete skeleton taking shape on the White House grounds. "I'm going to be able to use it very little. When it's finished, we're talking about six or seven months. But it will be used for hopefully hundreds of years by other presidents."

Trump's remarks ranged across the building's classical facade ("This is Rome. They like the flat roof. Greece likes the triangles"), its four-inch-thick bulletproof glass, and its "dead flat roof" — designed, he said, specifically to serve as a military drone port. "It's built for our snipers," he added, "not the enemy's snipers."

The president also took a swipe at a federal judge who has repeatedly tried to halt construction. "We have a judge that thinks it's a terrible thing that we're making a gift," Trump said. "He said it's terrible — that it should be paid for by the taxpayer. That's something I've never heard before."

The ballroom, now projected to cost $400 million and set to open around September 2028, has been a near-daily obsession for the president. Trump has publicly highlighted the ballroom project on roughly a third of all days this year — and it shows no sign of slowing down.

When a reporter pressed Trump on why Congress was being asked to weigh in if the project is privately funded, he acknowledged the tension — barely. "Congress is approving money for security," he said. "It may go — some of it may go here for additional security. I don't know."

That's something of an understatement. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley has introduced legislation including $1 billion earmarked for security improvements accompanying the ballroom project — a far cry from Trump's repeated vow that "not one penny" of taxpayer money would be spent.

The project has been dogged by legal challenges, design mockery from architects, and polls showing Americans oppose it 2-to-1. A YouGov survey found that 61% of U.S. adults did not approve of the construction, and the National Capital Planning Commission received over 32,000 public comments, overwhelmingly opposing it — some comparing its aesthetics to a "Vegas casino."

None of that appeared to dampen Trump's enthusiasm on Tuesday.

"There will never be anything like this built again," he said. "There will never be a roof built with this kind of safety."