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Republicans racing to name roads after Trump keep crashing and burning

Republicans racing to name roads after Trump keep crashing and burning

USA Today08-03-2025

Republicans racing to name roads after Trump keep crashing and burning | Opinion Republicans aren't satisfied with just renaming roads after Trump. Some want an official holiday, too.
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Frustrated Democrats want leaders to do more to stop Trump
Congressional limitations hinder Democrats' pushback against the Trump administration, but constituents say more can be done.
The drive to name an Arizona state highway after President Donald Trump ran off the road on Thursday.
I know. I'm surprised, too.
State Sen. Wendy Rogers, R-Flagstaff, proposed transforming State Route 260 into the Donald J. Trump Highway, noting that it's the patriotic thing to do.
He has, after all, been president for an entire six weeks now.
'All across the nation people have really endorsed this concept, and why?' Rogers told the Senate Public Safety Committee a few weeks ago. 'It's because WE THE PEOPLE should be able to name our roads and our byways, and WE THE PEOPLE need to be represented and to be proud of our United States president.'
Alas, WE THE PEOPLE must be crushed because the legislation stalled Thursday on a 15-9 vote of the Republican-run Senate, one shy of passing.
Opinion: Canada's Liberal Party looked doomed. Then Trump's tariff war revived it.
Trump Highway could be revived from the dead
The proposal could make a comeback, however, as state Sen. Shawnna Bolick, R-Phoenix, was absent from Thursday's vote.
Arizona is not the only red state looking to up its bootlicking game.
In Missouri, Republicans also are working on a bill to name a state highway for Trump, and in Oklahoma, there is talk of declaring Nov. 5 (the day he was elected) a state holiday – President Donald J. Trump Day.
I am not making this up.
In Arizona, Senate Concurrent Memorial 1001 offers 15 whereases to justify the Donald J. Trump Highway. Among other things, it notes that he won the popular vote, unleashed the Department of Government Efficiency on federal workers and 'built over 400 miles of the world's most robust and advanced border wall' during his first term.
Opinion: Georgetown law school dean clobbers Trump-loving US attorney's DEI griping
Should the legislation be revived, it ultimately would be up to the Arizona State Board on Geographic and Historic Names to decide whether Trump rates the 217.8-mile scenic strip of pavement that runs from Cottonwood to Eager.
Me? I'd suggest honoring him with a different route.
One filled with harrowing switchbacks and plenty of potholes.
Laurie Roberts is a columnist at the Arizona Republic, where this column originally appeared. Reach Roberts at laurie.roberts@arizonarepublic.com or follow her on X (formerly Twitter) at @LaurieRobertsaz, on Threads at @LaurieRobertsaz and on BlueSky at @laurieroberts.bsky.social

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