logo
Behind the scenes at Butterworth's: MAGA's haute new hangout

Behind the scenes at Butterworth's: MAGA's haute new hangout

Axios27-02-2025

Trump World 2.0 is busy building new D.C. clubhouses, and while Butterworth's bistro wasn't on many bingo cards, the nouveau French restaurant has quickly emerged as the destination du jour for MAGA elites.
Why it matters: Trump's inner circle likes to own its social spots, or at least occupy them (e.g. Harry's Bar, the Kennedy Center), and all-day "Butterworth's Club" is the latest conquest — and one eager to accommodate.
State of play: The grandmère -chic dining room on Capitol Hill opened in October before the election, but it was already primed to be a power player. Major investor Alex Butterworth, senior counsel for Uber, may have his name on the door. But ex-Breitbart editor Raheem Kassam, another mega-investor in the restaurant, draws a select clientele.
Restaurant sources tell Axios that Amazon hosted their holiday party in a private room.
One hospitality insider tells Axios people call it "Steve Bannon's restaurant," though he's not officially involved. The "War Room" podcaster lives nearby and holds court at private parties.
Inside the room: Chef/partner Bart Hutchins tells Axios the bistro wasn't a MAGA magnet upon opening. He worked for years at neighbor Beuchert's Saloon, and at first, saw many of his old regulars from all sides of the aisle.
"There're nights when it's just another neighborhood restaurant. And then there's a random Wednesday when everyone in here has half a million Twitter followers," says Hutchins.
Inauguration weekend was the turning point when bold-faced names — Kash Patel, Elon Musk, singer Grimes — popped up along with right-wing media stars like Curtis Yarvan and George Santos. The bar poured "American Carnage" and "Covfefe" cocktails (private party hosts can name their drinks for the night).
"People are like, OK, I went to that place 12 times in one week, it's now the place to be," Hutchins says.
Zoom out: A hospitality veteran who opened "Canadian disco-bistro" Le Mont Royal, Hutchins curated the vibe at Butterworth's.
His inspiration: throwback power rooms like LA's Spago and Dudley in New York — "places that become a scene for that city's industry, whether it's actors in LA or models in NYC."
How it works: " We're meticulous about the reservation list every night," says Hutchins. He's moved from leading the kitchen to working the floor, armed with a fat lookbook of new appointees, congressional VIPs, and need-to-know media types and influencers.
"Recognizing them is the big part. Having nooks and crannies to put people in when it's too busy," says Hutchins. "But if I know X-Y-Z is coming in at 8pm, and I have a full bar of celebrity watchers, I may need to set them up upstairs, turn down the lights, light some candles, and give them their privacy."
Another golden rule: Know the room. "Who's feuding right now?" says Hutchins. "I'm trying to make sure that Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert aren't sat next to each other."
The intrigue: Butterworth's menu of fried rabbit and natty wines bucks the Trumpian stereotype of McDonald's and well-done steak. But Hutchins, who measures success by selling more head cheese than cheeseburgers, says his field-to-table philosophy jives with the RFK Jr. acolytes and MAHA crowd.
"They're super interested in bone marrow, liver, feet," says Hutchins.
"Before, the audience for offal was Berkley hippie types who knew who Alice Waters was. Now it's right-wing staffers showing up and asking for the same stuff."
Zoom in: While Trump Town 1.0 was famous for its Fireball affinity, the new crowd sucks down dry gin martinis — "We run out of martini glasses every night," says Hutchins — and rips through kegs of Guinness (four in one night, as of last week).
"They're interested in low chemical, low intervention across the board," Hutchins says. Raw milk is a common request ("I wish I could, but I'd get in trouble").
Between the lines: Investors have reiterated that all are welcome at Butterworth's. The restaurant doesn't run at Inauguration fever-pitch 24/7, and private rooms are booked for Bannon brunch one day, and fantasy baseball dads the next.
"Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Bernie Sanders and Nancy Pelosi will be just as welcome here as JD Vance, Steve Bannon and Mike Johnson," Butterworth told the Financial Review.
What's next: There's a nostalgia to Butterworth's that seems to jive with MAGA populism — a throwback vibe that Hutchins plans to build on with a basement speakeasy for classic cocktails and live jazz in the future. "It's the type of pre-cell phone world I want to be a part of," he says.
As for a visit from the Big Man, Hutchins isn't sure. It's not that Trump has never dined out in a D.C. restaurant beyond his steakhouse.
"We don't have a back door, so I don't think the Secret Service will let him come, to be honest," says Hutchins. "But I wouldn't kick him out."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gavin Newsom, Elon Musk and Marjorie Taylor Greene agree on this one thing
Gavin Newsom, Elon Musk and Marjorie Taylor Greene agree on this one thing

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gavin Newsom, Elon Musk and Marjorie Taylor Greene agree on this one thing

SAN FRANCISCO — California Gov. Gavin Newsom and fellow Sacramento Democrats are finding themselves in an awkward yet convenient alliance with MAGA-world figures against President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' Just days after leaving the administration, Elon Musk took his opposition to the extreme over Trump's mega budget and reconciliation package, posting on X Tuesday that he 'just can't stand it anymore' with what he called the 'disgusting abomination' that is 'this massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill.' His outburst had Newsom, a frequent sparring partner, chiming in with agreement. 'Couldn't have said it better myself,' the governor responded to Musk. The vote of support from Newsom marks the latest turn in the rocky relationship between him and Musk, who enjoyed a favorable relationship with the governor while growing many of his companies within the state, but had become a regular target of criticism from the blue state leader during his time at the White House. Musk's post, meanwhile, encouraged Republican critics of the reconciliation package like Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) to quickly echo his outrage as well. But Newsom also found himself in agreement with conservative firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) on Tuesday over a particularly thorny provision of the bill: a 10-year ban on the enforcement of AI state regulation introduced by her fellow House Republicans. The Georgia lawmaker threatened to vote against the bill if it returns to the House with the moratorium still included — presenting a potential headache for GOP leadership, who could barely scrounge up the votes the first time. The package is being considered in the Senate, where the measure may not survive scrutiny under the upper chamber's Byrd rule, meant to strip out measures that have no impact or only a negligible one on the budget. 'I am adamantly OPPOSED to this and it is a violation of state rights and I would have voted NO if I had known this was in there,' Greene posted on X. 'We have no idea what AI will be capable of in the next 10 years and giving it free rein and tying states hands is potentially dangerous.' Newsom, who previously expressed fears about overregulating California's booming AI industry, has said he is concerned the moratorium will be 'overcorrecting in the other direction federally.' Four Democrats from the California Legislature joined a letter to Congress from state lawmakers on Tuesday morning to oppose the moratorium on state AI laws, only to see their criticisms echoed by Greene hours later. 'Given the long absence of federal action to address privacy and social media harms, barring all state and local AI laws until Congress acts threatens to setback policymaking and undermine existing enforcement on these issues,' they wrote as part of a bipartisan coalition of 260 state lawmakers. 'We respectfully urge you to reject any provision that preempts state and local AI legislation in this year's reconciliation package.'

Chinese-owned US farmland raises concerns of foreign drone attacks
Chinese-owned US farmland raises concerns of foreign drone attacks

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chinese-owned US farmland raises concerns of foreign drone attacks

(NewsNation) — Chinese-owned farmland located near key U.S. military installations may be making the country more vulnerable to a Ukraine-style drone attack, officials warn. There are currently nearly 370,000 acres of farmland the Chinese own. Several of those sites have been linked to the mysterious drone sightings that took place across the United States last fall. After Ukraine destroyed 40 Russian targets with 177 drones over the weekend, the attack has reopened questions about how vulnerable the United States is to such an attack given the farmland's proximity to military bases that could be targeted if the U.S. was to ever undergo a similar strike to what took place in Russia over the weekend. Russia severely limited after attack: Ex-Ukraine ambassador Those military installations stretch across the U.S. and include Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota, where a Chinese company, Fufeng, purchased farmland close to the base and announced plans to open a corn mill. The U.S. Air Force called the sale a threat to national security, and the sale was shut down, NewsNation previously reported. However, NewsNation has learned that the company still owns the land, which extends over more than 300 acres, again raising concerns that the military base and others could be prone to a drone attack. Several states have laws in place that prevent the Chinese from purchasing land. However, the challenge of monitoring potential sales is that the Chinese often use shell companies to purchase the land or use American residents to shield officials from learning who owns the land. Over the last five years, Chinese ownership of U.S. land has increased by 55%. Almost three-quarters of that land is located in the southern United States. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Seth Meyers skips asking George Clooney about Biden's mental decline, not recognizing him at fundraiser
Seth Meyers skips asking George Clooney about Biden's mental decline, not recognizing him at fundraiser

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Seth Meyers skips asking George Clooney about Biden's mental decline, not recognizing him at fundraiser

NBC "Late Night" host Seth Meyers interviewed Hollywood star George Clooney on Monday but failed to question the actor about the report that former President Joe Biden failed to recognize the a-list actor at his own 2024 campaign fundraiser or any of the news about the ex-president's mental decline in office. Just weeks after CNN host Jake Tapper and Axios journalist Alex Thompson revealed in their book "Original Sin" that Biden allegedly failed to recognize Clooney backstage at a June fundraiser last year, Meyers chose not to ask the actor about the incident — or even mention the former president during the entire interview. Approximately one month following the reported incident, Clooney wrote a guest essay in The New York Times calling for Biden to be replaced as the Democratic nominee due to his declining mental acuity. Credibility Crisis: Biden's Late-night Allies Go Quiet After Damning Cognitive Decline Revelations Rather than questioning the Hollywood star about the reported fundraiser incident, Meyers centered the interview around Clooney's acting career and his recent Tony Award nomination for his play "Good Night, and Good Luck." His omission of Biden was first flagged by Mediaite. Despite all the attention "Original Sin" has generated, liberal comedians Seth Meyers, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert have not mentioned any of the revelations, according to Grabien transcripts. The three hosts were all strong supporters of Biden's presidency, and Kimmel and Colbert helped fundraise for him last year. Read On The Fox News App The liberal hosts have all welcomed Biden for friendly interviews, the last time being on "Late Night with Seth Meyers" in February 2024, just days after the release of the Hur report. Meyers gently broached the subject of Biden's age before quickly moving on to other topics. Click Here For The Latest Media And Culture News Special Counsel Robert Hur, who conducted the investigation into Biden's mishandling of classified documents, wrote in his report that he declined to bring charges against the former president in part because a jury would likely not find him guilty due to a perception that he was a "sympathetic, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory." Meyers called Hur's comments a "gratuitous hypothetical" and stressed that Hur was a "Republican attorney" who "was originally appointed by Trump." "If that kind of language was appropriate in a legal finding, then prosecutors could have done the same thing to Trump," Meyers said before repeatedly drawing attention to President Donald Trump's mental acuity. Fox News' Joseph Wulfsohn contributed to this article source: Seth Meyers skips asking George Clooney about Biden's mental decline, not recognizing him at fundraiser

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store