Lawmakers vote to name Kennedy Center opera house after Melania Trump
"This designation is an excellent way to recognize her support and commitment to promoting the arts," said Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, who shepherded the Appropriations Committee's spending bill that funds John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, opposed the change and alleged it's part of giving Trump power to run the Kennedy Center "with very little oversight" from Congress.
More: Trump names a new head of the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts in DC: himself
President Donald Trump along with First Lady Melania Trump tour the Orion Capsule Room at the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Facility at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on May 27, 2020.
"The Republicans snuck in, I think, something that is slightly divisive, which is renaming one section of the Kennedy Center after a family member of this administration,' Pingree said.
The committee voted 33-25 to adopt the name change as part of a larger amendment. The full House and the Senate would still have to vote on the proposal approved by the Appropriations Committee as part of the spending bill for the interior, environment and other agencies.
But the move reflected support from Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress. The theater would be named the "First Lady Melania Trump Opera House" if the legislations becomes law.
Lawmakers have already agreed to spend $256.7 million on improvements to the Kennedy Center by 2029, as part of President Donald Trump's legislative priorities. The House subcommittee was voting on $37.2 million in routine annual funding for the center for the year starting Oct. 1.
"The Republicans have now given the president six times the normal amount of money to run the Kennedy Center, carte blanche over who will be on the board, and how different parts of the Kennedy Center − or perhaps the whole Kennedy Center itself− will be named," Pingree said.
Trump dismissed much of the Kennedy Center's board after he took office and designated himself chairman. He criticized drag performances and said after the cancelation of one theatre engagement that he "never liked 'Hamilton' very much."
"We'll make it great again," Trump said during a tour in March. "I'm very disappointed when I look around. The bottom line: It has tremendous potential."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: House panel votes to name Kennedy Center opera house for Melania Trump
Hashtags

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


CBS News
15 minutes ago
- CBS News
Thousands head to Fan Expo Boston to "geek out" and meet celebrity guests
Thousands of people dressed as Jedi Knights, superheroes and even the pope headed to Boston's Fan Expo this weekend at the Thomas Menino Convention and Exhibition Center. "It's a lot of people coming, enjoying their time, everybody loves going out in their costumes and stuff. It's a great time, everybody gets to geek out," said attendee Madi, who was dressed as Fiona from Shrek. The annual pop culture event brought together fans of cosplay, comics, anime, sci-fi and gaming, filling the halls with Boston's self-proclaimed geeks. From Jedi knights to video game characters like Mario and Luigi, the creativity was on full display. "Coming here on the Red Line, I was definitely getting a lot of looks, which is not surprising because when do you ever see the pope on the Red Line?" said Derek, donning a pope costume he bought on Amazon. Fan Expo's atmosphere offered something new around every corner, whether visitors were hardcore superfans or simply there to people-watch. "It's awesome, seeing all the costumes, and my costume's pretty low effort, but seeing some of the effort that people put into their homemade costumes is incredibly cool to see that," said Star Wars superfan Matt. Saturday's lineup featured big names from the Star Wars universe, including Ewan McGregor and Hayden Christensen. Massachusetts native John Cena also made an appearance. Bee, an attendee dressed as Rogue from "X-Men," said Fan Expo is something she does every year. "I love Fan Expo, I go every year. I've been going here since I started cosplaying and the vibes are always fantastic. Everyone is so geeky and having a blast. The energy is fantastic. I love Fan Expo," she said. The convention continues through Sunday with celebrity panels, photo ops and hundreds of exhibitors.


CBS News
15 minutes ago
- CBS News
Transportation Secretary Duffy tours Duluth International Airport; talks air traffic control
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy arrived at the Duluth International Airport on Saturday to tour one of the oldest air traffic control towers in the nation. "We'd play Atari back in the 80s right, old school. That is like rockstar technology compared to what they are using here," Secretary Duffy said at a press conference following the tour. Built in the 1950s the tower is running on equipment the Secretary calls old and antiquated. The FAA says this outdated tower has seen a 10 percent uptick in traffic over the last year. "Congress gave us 12.5 billion dollars as the down payment for upgrading this system," Secretary Duffy said referring to the "One Big Beautiful Bill." "Now, it's not all that we need. We need 31.5 billion but the 12.5 billion that we do have is going to go to new radar, new voice switches, new radios, new telecom." While touting congressional funding for towers across the nation, Secretary Duffy says the State of Minnesota will need to step in to round out the cash needed for the job in Duluth. "We're going to continue to work with all of you to ask you to get some more money from the state and local government," he said. The Minnesota State legislature allocated ten million dollars to the cause earlier this year in the state's transportation budget bringing the funding to about 34 million. Though an airport spokesperson says the project totals 72 million. "We know that the air traffic control tower is going to be 100 and some feet higher," said U.S. Representative Pete Stauber. "The sight lines are going to be better." Even if the nation's aging infrustructure isbrought up to speed, towers across the U.S. still need more employees. "We're about 3,000 air traffic controllers short right now and I've said many times, we can't flip a switch and turn on more controllers," the Secretary said. A CBS News investigation earlier this year found about 90 percent of US airport terminal towers don't have enough air traffic controllers, including Duluth and MSP. This is a problem that is decades in the making," Duffy said. "It's going to take months if not years to get us to full capacity but we're doing it." Secretary Duffy says they're offering cash bonuses to controllers who are at retirement age and fast-tracking the highest scoring applicants through the academy.


CBS News
15 minutes ago
- CBS News
St. Rita of Cascia Parish displays eucharistic miracles exhibit designed by first millennial saint
St. Rita of Cascia Parish in Chicago on Saturday debuted an exhibit designed by the soon-to-be-canonized first millennial saint, Carlo Acutis. The Vatican International Exhibit of Eucharistic Miracles of the World, designed by Acutis, features panels of photos and descriptions of eucharistic miracles that the Italian teenager documented on his website before his death in 2006. The exhibit is open Sunday at St. Rita from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the St. Augustine Hall. Acutis was only 15 years old when he died from leukemia. Born in London, he grew up in Milan where he managed the website for his parish and later a Vatican-based academy. He's often referred to as the patron saint of the internet, after he developed a website logging eucharistic miracles, making the information accessible to a wider audience. Pope Leo XIV announced that Acutis will be canonized on Sept. 7.