Federal judge signals he may halt Trump's $400 million White House ballroom project
A federal judge in Washington indicated Tuesday that he may terminate President Trump's plan to replace the White House's demolished East Wing with a 90,000 square foot, $400 million ballroom, setting up a ruling that could come by the end of March.
Judge Richard Leon, a George W. Bush appointee, offered pointed criticism of the project and the legal arguments advanced in its defense during a hearing brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The NTHP is seeking to halt construction until congressional approval is secured and independent reviews are completed, The Guardian reported.
Leon did not mince words about the scope of what's underway. "This is an iconic symbol of this nation."
The judge called the administration's legal reasoning a "brazen interpretation of the law's vocabulary" and said he was "struggling to see this as an 'alteration'" of the existing structure, given that the East Wing has already been demolished. Demolition began in October, with the president aiming for completion by 2028.
Shifting arguments, shifting ground
What has clearly frustrated the court is not simply the project itself but the legal strategy behind it. Leon described a pattern of inconsistency from the government's side.
"This has been a case where there have been shifting theories, shifting dynamics, I regret to say, from the beginning."
Justice Department lawyer Yaakov Roth asserted that the ballroom project had a "dual source of funding and dual source of authority" and argued it fell outside the court's purview. Justice Department attorneys also urged Leon in a court filing last week to dismiss the case entirely, arguing that the NTHP "should not even be afforded another try."
Thaddeus Heuer, attorney for the NTHP, accused the administration of running a "months-long merry-go-round ride" over questions of responsibility and authority. He framed the government's position bluntly.
"What they can't do here is have it both ways."
Heuer also suggested the administration had "forgotten the proverbial first law of holes … When you find yourself in one, stop digging."
The review process question
At the center of this legal fight is the question of who gets to approve major changes to one of the most historically significant structures in the country.
Trump fired all six members of the US Commission of Fine Arts in October and replaced them with handpicked designees. Those replacements gave their unanimous consent to the project last month. The National Capital Planning Commission, meanwhile, postponed its vote of approval to April, citing a need to assess a "large amount of public input."
Leon previously denied the NTHP's first request for an injunction last month on procedural grounds, allowing building work to continue while permitting the group to file an amended complaint. But his tone on Tuesday suggested the amended complaint has given him a different view of the matter. He noted the replaced commission members had "no track record" and described the case as one that would likely end up before the Supreme Court, saying in a February order that his earlier decision landed "squarely" in that territory.
The bigger picture for conservatives
This is a story that puts conservatives in an uncomfortable spot, and it's worth being honest about why.
There is nothing wrong with a president wanting to improve the White House. Previous presidents have done it. Gerald Ford installed an outdoor swimming pool in 1975. Renovations, upgrades, and additions are part of the building's living history. The White House is not a museum frozen in amber; it is the working residence of the most powerful person on earth, and it should reflect that.
But the legal process matters. Conservatives have spent years, rightly, arguing that executive power has limits, that process exists for a reason, and that the ends do not justify the means. Those principles do not pause when our side holds the pen. The question here is not whether a ballroom is a good idea. It is whether the proper legal channels were followed before demolition began and construction moved forward.
When the government fires an entire independent review commission and replaces it with appointees who then deliver unanimous approval, and when the legal justifications shift repeatedly under judicial scrutiny, the process looks less like oversight and more like a formality being engineered after the fact. That is the kind of institutional shortcutting conservatives have criticized for decades when the other side does it.
Leon appears poised to rule by the end of March. If he terminates the project, the legal battle will almost certainly escalate. The judge himself seems to expect it.
The East Wing is already gone. Whatever comes next, that fact cannot be undone.



