logo
An Oval Office replica opens

An Oval Office replica opens

Boston Globe18 hours ago
The gilt gap separates President Trump's Oval Office, which he has adorned with gold details and tchotchkes since taking office in January, and a newly redesigned life-size replica of it that lies just across the street at the White House Historical Association's People's House exhibit.
The association has been around since 1961, but the immersive Oval Office tour opened just last fall, intending to be a replica of the most famous room in the country. Until the Trump transformation was unveiled late last month, visitors who came had seen a room looking almost identical to the one occupied by former President Joe Biden.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
But the gilt gap renders the newer replica far from exact.
Advertisement
'We are replicating President Trump's complete tenure within the Oval Office,' said Luke Boorady, the exhibit's managing director, 'starting with his first-term décor.'
Ann Compton, the chair of the association's advisory council, said the decision to go back in time was purely logistical.
'You can't go and buy anything that's in there right now,' Compton said. 'You have to have it made.'
'They just couldn't make it all in time,' she added.
Advertisement
Trump, a real estate developer with strong and heavily gilded views about interior design, has been fiddling more with the White House complex in his second term. He paved over the Rose Garden and made it into a Mar-a-Lago-like patio after lamenting that women's heels would 'go right through the grass.' In June, he oversaw the construction of two 88-foot flagpoles that straddle the White House. And last week, he announced his latest project: a 90,000-square-foot ballroom estimated to cost $200 million.
But the Oval Office replica is a throwback to his first term. It is strikingly similar to how Trump had the room set up back then, with many of the objects 3D printed to mimic the real thing. The books on each shelf are the same and sit in the same position. The portraits, though printed instead of painted, appear identical. So does the Reagan-era beige rug and Frederic Remington's 'Bronco Buster' statuette, which Biden removed.
'We used a lot of the same vendors that do work at the White House,' Boorady said, citing the people who installed the floors and upholstered the furniture. (Trump's sofas were first used by President George W. Bush.) 'In fact, when they came, they noted, 'Hey, you're off a half-inch here, a quarter-inch off here.''
Of course, not everything can be the same. The Resolute Desk has only one phone instead of two, because visitors kept tangling the lines. Unlike the real Oval Office, there is no bust of Abraham Lincoln, as it would block the exhibit's accessible entrance.
On Saturday, parents stood in line as tired children sprawled out on couches meant to mimic those where top officials sit in the real Oval Office. Many visitors were thrilled at the opportunity to sit behind the Resolute Desk and make an imaginary phone call to a world leader. One woman enthusiastically endorsed the feature on the presidential desk known as the Diet Coke button, musing about one day getting her own that would instead summon gin and tonics.
Advertisement
And some said they wished Trump had never veered from the first-term version.
'I think this one's nice,' said Hunter McElroy, a 25-year-old property tax assessor from Morgantown, West Virginia. 'I think this is a little more classier, with a little bit less gold.'
Hoang Vo, a software engineer visiting from Dallas with his family, had toured the White House earlier in the day but had not gotten a chance to visit the real Oval Office, so he was mesmerized by the chance to experience something similar in person.
'It's cool and very unique,' Vo, 55, said of the replica.
Others, however, were not convinced.
'I don't like it,' said Maria de los Angeles Sapriza, 63, who was visiting from Uruguay. 'I think it's a little bit fake.' Her eyes widened when she learned about the additional gilt brought in by the president, reportedly with the help of his Mar-a-Lago 'gold guy.'
The gilt gap will vanish next year, when the association plans to transform the replica to mirror the current décor of the Oval Office.
Staff and visitors alike said they were excited to see the exhibit match the Oval Office in its current form. But that may be a daunting task given Trump's addition of the many golden objects, onlays, and other detailing. The White House, Compton said, was helping with the transformation, but 'it keeps changing,' she said. 'They keep adding things.'
Advertisement
'We have to go out and find our own people to make the things not on the shelf,' she added.
But Boorady said gilding up the replica would be no problem.
'I don't think the lift is going to be that different,' he said. 'It's just more objects.'
In due time, he said, someone would be on a ladder adding gold ornaments to the ceiling, and the gold trophies adorning the mantle would be no different from the ones across the street at the White House.
'We want visitors to be able to feel the White House, experience it, understand its long history and the important things that have happened,' Boorady said.
And as for the behemoth of a ballroom Trump is promising to build, the association has not yet begun contemplating a replica.
'We haven't really thought about that,' Boorady said.
This article originally appeared in
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says major US banks 'discriminated against me' as White House preps debanking executive order
Trump says major US banks 'discriminated against me' as White House preps debanking executive order

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump says major US banks 'discriminated against me' as White House preps debanking executive order

Debanking is back in the spotlight this week after President Trump said Tuesday that the country's two largest US banks, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC), denied him as a customer. "The banks discriminated against me very badly, and I was very good to the banks," Trump said on CNBC's "Squawk Box," adding that "they discriminate against many conservatives." For years, Republicans have claimed that US banks have denied accounts to certain customers for political reasons. Crypto companies have warned more recently that they weren't permitted to get banking services during the Biden era. "I had hundreds of millions. I had many, many accounts loaded up with cash. I was loaded up with cash, and they told me, 'I'm sorry, sir, we can't have you. You have 20 days to get out,'" Trump said of his experience losing bank accounts with JPMorgan Chase. The president said he then went to Bank of America "to deposit a billion dollars plus" and was similarly denied. "He said, 'We can't do it,'" Trump told "Squawk Box" while also referencing pressure on banks from Washington, D.C., regulators as a key reason for why he and others have been denied banking services. "I ended up going to small banks all over the place," Trump added. The president's comments came in response to a Wall Street Journal report late Monday stating that the White House is preparing to draft a related executive order around debanking that would fine banks found discriminating against customers on political grounds. Bank of America did not immediately offer a response to Trump's comments. "We don't close accounts for political reasons, and we agree with President Trump that regulatory change is desperately needed. We commend the White House for addressing this issue and look forward to working with them to get this right," a JPMorgan spokesperson said in emailed comments. Both of these giant lenders and their CEOs have denied debanking customers on political grounds. Learn more about high-yield savings accounts, money market accounts, and CD accounts. Trump first brought visibility to the debanking issue back in January when he confronted Bank of America's Brian Moynihan about it during a live Q&A at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "I hope you start opening your bank to conservatives," Trump told Moynihan. The president also appeared to include JPMorgan Chase CEO Jame Dimon in his confrontation. "I don't know if the regulators mandated that because of Biden or what, but you and Jamie and everybody else, I hope you open your banks to conservatives, because what you're doing is wrong," Trump added. Two months later, the Trump Organization sued major credit card lender Capital One (COF) for allegedly debanking hundreds of its accounts following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol in Washington, D.C. Bank regulators have already eliminated one element in supervision that has been pointed to as a culprit of debunking, known as reputational risk. Critics said this element of supervision was previously too subjective, allowing regulators additional room to penalize lenders for taking on customers they deemed risky. "The heart of the problem is regulatory overreach and supervisory discretion," a spokesperson for the Bank Policy Institute, a D.C. banking industry advocacy group, said in an emailed statement. "The banking agencies have already taken steps to address issues like reputational risk, and we're hopeful that any forthcoming executive order will reinforce this progress by directing regulators to confront the flawed regulatory framework that gave rise to these concerns in the first place," BPI added. Each of the bosses for these big banks has addressed the issue by also pointing a finger at regulators. "We have not debanked anyone because of political or religious relationships, period," JPMorgan's Dimon said during a podcast interview earlier this year, in which he acknowledged that debanking happens. "The reality is that if they gave us clarity from the regulatory thing and avoid the second-guessing, that would be helpful," Bank of America's Moynihan said in a CBS interview on Sunday. David Hollerith is a senior reporter for Yahoo Finance covering banking, crypto, and other areas in finance. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices Sign in to access your portfolio

Trump is creating a task force for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles
Trump is creating a task force for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles

San Francisco Chronicle​

time7 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Trump is creating a task force for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is establishing a task force on the 2028 Olympic Games being held in Los Angeles. Trump will sign an executive order on Tuesday to make the task force official, the White House said. Trump has said that the Los Angeles Summer Games are among the events he's most looking forward to in his second term. The 2028 Games will be the first Olympics to be hosted by the U.S. since the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah. Trump 'considers it a great honor to oversee this global sporting spectacle,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, calling sports one of the president's 'greatest passions.' LA28 president and chair Casey Wasserman said the task force "marks an important step forward in our planning efforts and reflects our shared commitment to delivering not just the biggest, but the greatest Games the world has ever seen in the summer of 2028.'

Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the U.S. after a previous migrant deal with the U.K. collapsed
Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the U.S. after a previous migrant deal with the U.K. collapsed

Los Angeles Times

time7 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the U.S. after a previous migrant deal with the U.K. collapsed

KIGALI, Rwanda — Rwanda on Tuesday became the third African nation to agree to accept deportees from the United States under the Trump administration's plans to send migrants to countries they have no ties with to get them off American soil. Rwandan government spokesperson Yolande Makolo told The Associated Press in a statement that the East African country would accept up to 250 deportees from the U.S., with 'the ability to approve each individual proposed for resettlement' under the agreement. Makolo didn't provide a timeline for any deportees to arrive in Rwanda or say if they would arrive at once or in several batches. She said details were still being worked out. The U.S. sent 13 men it described as dangerous criminals who were in the U.S. illegally to South Sudan and Eswatini in Africa last month and has said it is seeking more agreements with African nations. It said those deportees' home countries refused to take them back. The U.S. has also deported hundreds of Venezuelans and others to Costa Rica, El Salvador and Panama under President Trump's plans to expel people who he says entered the U.S. illegally and are 'the worst of the worst.' Rwanda attracted international attention and some outrage when it struck a deal in 2022 with the U.K. to accept migrants who had arrived in the U.K. to seek asylum. Under that proposed deal, their claims would have been processed in Rwanda and, if successful, they would have stayed there. The contentious agreement was criticized by rights groups and others as being unethical and unworkable and was ultimately scrapped when Britain's new Labour government took over. Britain's Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that the deal was unlawful because Rwanda was not a safe third country for migrants. The Trump administration has come under scrutiny for the African countries it has entered into secretive deals with to take deportees. It sent eight men from South Sudan, Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar and Vietnam to South Sudan in early July after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling cleared the way for their deportations. They were held for weeks in a converted shipping container at an American military base in Djibouti as the legal battle over their deportations played out. South Sudan, which is tipping toward civil war, has declined to say where the men are being held or what their fate is. The U.S. also deported five men who are citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos to the southern African kingdom of Eswatini, where the government said they will be held in solitary confinement in prison for an undetermined period of time. A human rights lawyer in Eswatini said the men are being denied access to legal representation there and has taken authorities to court. Eswatini is Africa's last absolute monarchy, and the king rules over government and political parties are effectively banned. Both South Sudan and Eswatini have declined to give details of their agreements with the U.S. Rwanda, a relatively small country of some 15 million people, has long stood out on the continent for its recovery from a genocide that killed over 800,000 people in 1994. It has promoted itself under longtime President Paul Kagame as an example of stability and development, but human rights groups allege there are also deadly crackdowns on any perceived dissent against Kagame, who has been president for 25 years. Government spokesperson Makolo said the agreement with the U.S. was Rwanda doing its part to help with international migration issues because 'our societal values are founded on reintegration and rehabilitation.' 'Those approved (for resettlement in Rwanda) will be provided with workforce training, healthcare, and accommodation support to jumpstart their lives in Rwanda, giving them the opportunity to contribute to one of the fastest-growing economies in the world over the last decade,' she said. There were no details about whether Rwanda had received anything in return for taking the deportees. Gonzaga Muganwa, a Rwandan political analyst, said 'appeasing President Trump pays.' 'This agreement enhances Rwanda's strategic interest of having good relationships with the Trump administration,' he said. The U.K. government estimated that its failed migration deal with Rwanda cost around $900 million in public money, including approximately $300 million in payments to Rwanda, which said it was not obligated to refund the money when the agreement fell apart. Ssuuna and Imray write for the Associated Press. Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store