Trump to appear on 24-carat gold coin marking America's 250th anniversary
A federal arts panel has commissioned a 24-carat gold coin featuring President Donald Trump's image to commemorate the 250th anniversary of American independence from Britain. The coin, expected to measure roughly three inches in diameter, has already been approved by Trump himself, and the US Mint will now finalize its dimensions before Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent gives the order to strike it.
The design is based on a photograph from the National Portrait Gallery in Washington. When a White House aide, Chamberlain Harris, was asked how large the coin should be, the answer was characteristically direct: "The larger the better."
And just like that, the left found something new to hyperventilate about.
A Tradition Democrats Forgot About
Senator Jeff Merkley rushed to the microphone with the kind of breathless alarm that has become a reflex for congressional Democrats whenever Trump's name appears on anything:
"Monarchs and dictators put their faces on coins, not leaders of a democracy."
Stirring stuff. There's just one problem: it's historically illiterate.
In 1926, an image of the sitting president, Calvin Coolidge, a Republican, was printed on a commemorative coin marking 150 years since the 1776 Declaration of Independence. Coolidge's profile was overlaid with George Washington's on that coin. The republic survived. Nobody called Coolidge a monarch. Nobody suggested that a celebratory piece of gold spelled the end of self-governance.
But that was before every presidential action had to be filtered through a cable-news panic cycle. Merkley went further, claiming the coin is Trump's "latest effort to distort the meaning of America's 250th birthday." What meaning, exactly, is distorted by commemorating the sitting president during the nation's semiquincentennial? Merkley didn't say. He didn't have to. The quote was built for a tweet, not an argument, as Daily Mail reports.
The Legal Question That Isn't Really One
There are actually two coins in play. The gold commemorative piece is the centerpiece, but Trump has also proposed a $1 coin bearing his image that would go into circulation this year.
Donald Scarinci, a member of the bipartisan Citizens Advisory Committee, noted that the $1 coin "would clearly breach a law prohibiting the image of a sitting or former president appearing on a dollar coin until three years after their death." The Citizens Advisory Committee refused to consider the gold coin proposal last month, and Scarinci acknowledged that under the law, both his panel and the Commission of Fine Arts are meant to approve the coin.
But Scarinci also pointed to a potential loophole: the gold coin would remain a collector's item, not circulating currency. That distinction matters. Commemorative coins occupy a different legal and cultural space than the quarters in your pocket. They are historical markers, not instruments of commerce.
Scarinci summed up the situation plainly:
"But we still fully expect them to plough ahead and mint both coins."
In other words, advisory panels will advise. The administration will act.
What This Is Actually About
Strip away the performative outrage, and the story is remarkably simple. The United States is turning 250 years old. The sitting president will appear on a commemorative gold coin, just as a sitting president did at the 150-year mark. The coin will be a collector's item, not something you hand to a cashier at a gas station.
The Democratic objection isn't really about norms or law. It's about symbolism. They cannot stomach the idea of Trump being woven into the fabric of a patriotic celebration, because they spent years arguing he represents the antithesis of American values. A gold coin commemorating Trump alongside the founding of the nation is, for them, an aesthetic emergency.
Notice what Merkley's critique requires you to believe: that a commemorative coin featuring a duly elected president is the behavior of monarchs and dictators, but that a nearly identical coin featuring Calvin Coolidge a century ago was perfectly fine. The principle bends to fit the person. That's not a principle. It's a preference.
A Coin Worth Collecting
The broader series of coins the US Mint is planning for the 250th anniversary will presumably feature other historical imagery. But the gold Trump coin will be the one people talk about, buy, and preserve. The left's fury will only increase demand.
Something is fitting about the whole affair. America's founding was an act of defiance. A 24-carat reminder of that, featuring the president who has built his political identity on defiance, seems less like a departure from tradition and more like a continuation of it.
Three inches of gold. And the opposition still can't handle it.





