Saturday, June 13

Washington — The Trump administration has asked an appeals court to allow President Trump’s name to remain on the Kennedy Center’s signage, a last-minute request after a lower court judge set a Friday deadline for the name to come down.

U.S. District Court Judge Christopher Cooper determined last month that the president’s name was illegally added to The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and ordered that it be removed. He also blocked plans for the Kennedy Center to close for renovations for two years. On Friday, Cooper denied the Trump administration’s request for a stay of his permanent injunction pending appeal, meaning his order won’t be paused and the deadline stands. 

Workers were seen erecting scaffolding outside the Kennedy Center under its name on Friday, but the president’s name remained on the building’s front facade as of 6 p.m.

Then, late Friday, the Justice Department asked the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to stay Cooper’s ruling by 7 p.m. Friday. In its emergency motion, the government wrote that “it does not make sense to alter the Center’s name and signage now, only to potentially revert the name again after what should be a successful appeal.”

The Trump administration argued it could cause public confusion for the Kennedy Center to change its name multiple times in the span of a year, and said some donors specifically gave money to the center because of Mr. Trump’s name.

“Without the name, ‘Trump’ on the Building, our fundraising will not only come to a halt, but any and all monies raised or committed would be obligated to be returned, refunded, or terminated,” the government wrote.

The motion echoed some of the arguments raised by Mr. Trump himself for renovating the Kennedy Center, including that the building is in “bad shape” and is “unsightly to look at.” 

“It is unable to compete with other such venues throughout the United States, but when completed, as planned, will be the envy of the World, something that everyone, including this court, will be proud of,” the filing said.

Earlier Friday, Cooper laid out his reasoning for denying a request for a stay.

“Most notably, for the detailed reasons laid out in the Court’s [initial] ruling, Defendants have not ‘made a strong showing that [they] are likely to succeed on the merits’ of any appeal,” the judge wrote. “Nor have Defendants demonstrated that they ‘will be irreparably injured absent a stay.'” 

Workers stand on scaffolding outside the Kennedy Center on June 12, 2026, ahead of a deadline to remove President Trump's name from the building.

Workers stand on scaffolding outside the Kennedy Center on June 12, 2026, ahead of a deadline to remove President Trump’s name from the building.

Alex WROBLEWSKI /AFP via Getty Images


The center, run by a Trump-aligned board of trustees, voted in December to add the president’s name to the institution, rebranding it as the Trump-Kennedy Center. The center is the premier arts venue in the nation’s capital and was established by Congress as a memorial to President John F. Kennedy.

A Democratic member of Congress who sits on the board challenged the move in court. In May, Cooper ruled that only Congress could approve a name change to the institution and set a deadline of June 12 for complying with his order. 

Earlier this month, CBS News reported that lawyers for the center were instructing staff to immediately begin the process of switching the name of the facility back to its original title. The instructions were laid out in a memo sent by the center’s general counsel and obtained by CBS News.

Cooper’s original order also blocked plans by the administration and trustees to close the center for nearly two years for major renovations. 

The Kennedy Center’s website has already removed the president’s name from much of its online material. 

Mr. Trump made moves to put his mark on the center soon after his return to office last year, removing Democratic-appointed members of the board and installing allies and top administration officials instead. The president and his allies also sought to make changes to the types of performances at the institution. 

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