
Pro-Trump Kennedy Center Executive Says He Was Fired
Floyd Brown, a longtime right-wing activist, said on Thursday that he had been fired from the Kennedy Center because of his views on same-sex marriage.
Mr. Brown said in a long post on X that he was fired on Wednesday by Richard Grenell, whom President Trump appointed as the interim leader of the center in February after he began imposing his grip on it. Mr. Brown said his dismissal happened about two hours after CNN contacted him for comment on his past statements on homosexuality and marriage.
The Kennedy Center did not announced Mr. Brown's appointment. He said in a LinkedIn post this month that he had started working at the center as vice president of development. The executive in that position leads the department responsible for raising millions of dollars for the center.
It was not immediately clear what activities he was involved with at the center. The Kennedy Center did not immediately respond to requests for comment made outside business hours on Thursday.
Mr. Brown said Thursday that his requests for an explanation for his dismissal and to speak with Mr. Grenell, who during the president's first term was recognized as America's first gay cabinet member, have been ignored. Mr. Brown claimed that he was told he would be fired if he did not recant his position on 'traditional marriage.' 'Needless to say, I refused to recant and was shown the door,' he wrote.
Mr. Brown was the operative behind the racist Willie Horton attack ads during the 1988 presidential campaign. He later promoted conspiracy theories about Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, too. Mr. Brown has also made comments denigrating homosexuality in the past. In an archived page from one of his defunct websites, FloydReports.com, he lamented the victories of 'secular pro-gay culture.'
'Comments rooted in my personal Christian views, which I have made in the past, have no impact upon my work here at the Kennedy Center nor do they impinge on my interactions with colleagues,' Mr. Brown wrote in his X post. 'I have never intended to attack or demean any person in my statements, and have always shared the mission of Jesus, striving to love others unconditionally.'
This is the latest episode in months of upheaval at the Kennedy Center.
Mr. Trump stunned the cultural world in February when he made himself chairman of the Kennedy Center and purged its previously bipartisan board of Biden-era appointees, making his loyalist Mr. Grenell the president. Mr. Trump's actions have prompted criticism, and some artists have canceled their engagements at the center in protest.
Mr. Grenell has culled the Kennedy Center's staff, saying it faces serious financial problems. He has also denounced some of the center's efforts to embrace diversity, saying it should promote 'common sense programming.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
25 minutes ago
- News24
Tongaat appoints Vision CEO to the helm amid ‘imminent' asset transfer
Be among those who shape the future with knowledge. Uncover exclusive stories that captivate your mind and heart with our FREE 14-day subscription trial. Dive into a world of inspiration, learning, and empowerment. You can only trial once.


E&E News
35 minutes ago
- E&E News
Mike Lee seeks to reinstate public lands sales in megabill
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Chair Mike Lee wants to revive public lands sales axed last month from the Republican tax, energy and security spending megabill. POLITICO's E&E News asked the Utah Republican Monday whether he intended to bring back public lands provisions that were cut from the House package. Lee, who was on his way to a procedural vote on a Defense department nominee, responded, 'I gotta go vote, but yes.' Last month, following a protracted intraparty battle, House leaders stripped the sale or transfer of nearly half a million acres in Nevada and Utah from the 'one, big, beautiful bill.' Advertisement The bill is now awaiting action in the Senate, where senators will retool it and return it to the House. POLITICO reported Monday that Senate committees, including Environment and Public Works, plan to begin releasing text as early as this week. Lee has long railed against federal ownership of lands in Western states. He frequently points out that roughly two-thirds of land in Utah is federally owned. On Monday, he did not elaborate on the details of what he plans to reintroduce. Lee's plans could add a major hurdle into the upper chamber's race to pass their version of the bill to unlock President Donald Trump's domestic agenda by July 4. Public lands sales are caustic to some members of the Senate like Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), who has vowed to never vote for the sale of public lands. Senate Republicans can only afford to lose three votes on the legislation, which is being passed via budget reconciliation — a parliamentary measure that allows them to skirt the Senate's 60-vote filibuster. The return of public lands sales would also reignite anger from Democrats and public lands advocates, who have long worried about Lee's intentions. 'If Sen. Lee tries to reinsert public lands selloff provisions in the Senate bill, it shows just how out of touch he is with what Western Americans and Americans across the country want,' said Michael Carroll, public lands campaign director at the Wilderness Society, in an interview. 'Congress stripped that provision out of the budget bill and now it looks like this provision's going to have to get taken out of the Senate bill if and when Sen. Lee decides to move forward.' Public lands sales first entered the House reconciliation bill through a committee amendment from Reps. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.) and Celeste Maloy (R-Utah). Amodei and Maloy argued the amendment was carefully tailored to address housing needs, but opponents warned it would set a precedent that public lands can be sold any time Congress needs to raise revenues. The language was stripped by House leadership just hours before the vote after a push from Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.), Trump's first Interior secretary. He had threatened to vote against the whole bill unless the provision was removed.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Chicago Fire reveal plans for new stadium in Chicago's South Loop
The Chicago Fire have announced plans to build a brand-new stadium. This will be a soccer-specific stadium, in the long-vacant plot of land in the South Sloop, known as "The 78." The team says it will be privately funded. It is estimated that it will house 22,000 fans. Construction will begin as soon as this fall and be finished in time for the 2028 Major League Soccer season.