America’s 250th: A welcome ‘distraction’ for the White House

In recent weeks, President Donald Trump has waved off the stalled Iran negotiations and the looming midterm elections with a shrug: “I don’t care,” he said during a Cabinet meeting last week. But there is one topic that has his full attention: America’s 250th birthday.

People close to the president say he’s fixated on the flurry of events descending on Washington for the semiquincentennial celebration. He’s throwing himself into construction and renovation projects around the capital, staging a UFC fight at the White House — his idea — and attempting to salvage a botched “Freedom 250” concert series by reimagining it as a political rally.

“It’s a good distraction from the war,” said a former White House official, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “The president is locked in right now on a lot of the enhancements to Washington, D.C. … and a lot of the pomp and circumstance.”

The conflict with Iran — to say the least — is untimely for celebration optics. As the U.S. military and Iran exchange fresh strikes in a war with no clear end in sight, crews are assembling a hulking UFC arena on the South Lawn of the White House. 

A White House official attributed the contrast to bad timing, but they said Trump and the anniversary events are charging ahead.

“The plans and vision for UFC at the White House was in motion long before the Iran conflict started,” said the White House official, who was granted anonymity to speak about internal strategy. They said hosting a UFC fight — a sport Trump has avidly followed for years — was meant as a nonpartisan celebration intended to honor members of the armed forces.

Trump made a similar nonpartisan argument for the “Freedom 250” concert series, which a majority of the announced artists saw quite differently. 

Shortly after a nine-act lineup was made public, several of the performers — including Martina McBride, the Commodores and Bret Michaels — withdrew from the event, saying they were not told the event was political in nature. 

“I will not be performing at the Great American State Fair on June 25th,” McBride, a country music star, posted on X. “I was presented with an opportunity to perform at a nonpartisan event but that turned out to be misleading.” 

As the defections mounted, Trump took to Truth Social to attack the musicians and to float scrapping the format entirely.

“We should have a giant MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN RALLY, for 250, instead of having overpriced singers, who nobody wants to hear, whose music is boring, and yet who do nothing but complain,” he wrote. 

In an interview with the New York Post’s “Pod Force One” podcast, Trump brushed off the departures, saying the artists handed Freedom 250 “free publicity.”

“I don’t even want them,” he added.

The bungled concert rollout and Trump’s face-saving pivot drew fire even within his own camp, where some saw the proposed MAGA rally as a squandered opportunity. 

“I’m actually pretty pissed at how badly they’ve bungled America 250,” conservative commentator Matt Walsh posted on X. “First they tried to invite Milli Vanilli and a bunch of other absurdly washed up geriatric one hit wonders. Then when that didn’t work they decided to convert the event into a Trump rally where Trump will talk about himself for 90 minutes. This should have been a massive, raucous celebration of the country and its 250 year history. Now it will be a political rally identical to the ten million other ones we’ve already seen.”

America 250 vs. Freedom 250 

Much of the confusion over how partisan the celebrations really are can be traced back to two separate organizations with confusingly similar names.

America 250 is the official, congressionally authorized commission, created in 2016 for the bipartisan national commemoration of the country’s founding. Its website advertises “America’s Block Party”: a cross-country celebration of the nation’s founding on July 3 and 4 that is more generally structured as the official bipartisan national commemoration. 

Freedom 250 grew out of an executive order Trump signed upon returning to office. The order created a “Task Force 250” to mark the same anniversary — but chaired by Trump, with Vice President JD Vance as vice chairman. The group is far less forthcoming: It does not clearly list its donors or say who runs its day-to-day operations.

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