Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Everyday Americans understand tenants can't make alterations to property they don't own, but Trump can't seem to grasp it, so a U.S. judge has set him straight

Demolition in action to make space for ballroom (AP)


Imagine renting a house and deciding you want to tear out a fireplace to build a rumpus room. Imagine that you move ahead on this project without consulting the person who owns the house, your landlord. Do you have a problem on your hands? The answer is yes because, in the U.S., it generally is unlawful for a tenant to make renovations to a property he does not own. Here's how the superlawyers.com website puts it:

The landlord is responsible for structural improvements, habitability needs, and major home systems. As the property owner, they are responsible for keeping the property compliant with building codes and health regulations. They will also address tenant requests for repairs and maintenance to the building. . . . 

Typically, daily maintenance and minor repairs are the tenant’s responsibility. The tenant is also responsible for making repairs to the damage they caused. If the tenant wants to make major changes or improvements, they will likely need the approval of the landlord. This restriction is typically included in the lease. There may also be a term that requires the tenant to restore the property to its pre-lease condition if they do make significant changes.

You probably are thinking to yourself: "That's a simple concept: If you don't own it, don't mess with it." It is simple, but it apparently is too complex for Donald J. Trump, president of the United States, to comprehend. That's why Richard J. Leon, U.S. judge for the District of Columbia, issued an injunction yesterday bringing construction on Trump's White House ballroom to a halt.

In essence, Leon ruled, the American people own the White House by virtue of paying taxes, and that means Trump is the equivalent of a tenant, one who must go through the people's representatives, in Congress, to proceed with even minor alterations. To be sure, the president's vision for a ballroom certainly is grand (and tacky) in scope, and that makes it especially important, Leon found, that Trump makes sure he obtains authority to alter the property. In a jointly published story, CNN and AOL have details about a decision that left America with one pissed off president:

A federal judge on Tuesday blocked President Donald Trump from moving ahead with any further work on a massive new $400 million ballroom on the former site of the White House East Wing.

“The President of the United States is the steward of the White House for future generations of First Families. He is not, however, the owner!” Judge Richard Leon wrote.

Leon, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, said he was delaying implementation of his ruling for two weeks to allow the government to appeal. But he warned that “any above-ground construction over the next fourteen days that is not in compliance” with his ruling “is at risk of being taken down depending on the outcome of this case.” The Trump administration immediately told the judge it will appeal. 

The issues are not complicated, but Leon seemed to take care not to bruise the president's ego, which might be more massive than his planned (and tacky) ballroom. CNN/AOL report:

The crux of the issue, Leon concluded in his decision, was that Trump had not received approval from lawmakers to undertake the bold construction project, which he said was required by federal law.

“(U)nless and until Congress blesses this project through statutory authorization, construction has to stop!” he wrote, adding that the good news” is that Trump and Congress can work to authorize the project.

According to CNN/AOL, Trump is taking his pet project personally. Perhaps that is why yesterday's ruling had to sting: 

Trump, a former real estate developer, has been personally involved in ballroom details, from floor plans to marble selection.

“I’m so busy that I don’t have time to do this, but – I’m fighting wars and other things, but this is very important, because this is going to be with us for a long time,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One Sunday evening, adding, “I think it’ll be the greatest ballroom anywhere in the world.”

The ballroom project has an estimated size of approximately 89,000 square feet, according to lead architect Shalom Baranes. By contrast, the primary White House structure, the Executive Mansion, is just 55,000 square feet.

Trump has maintained that the project isn’t subject to any oversight and that he should be able to continue it without any serious scrutiny. He has promised it will be complete in the summer of 2028, months before he leaves office.

Was Trump a tad peeved at having his grand plans short-circuited -- for now? As you might expect from our toddler-in-chief, the answer is yes. From a joint report at The New Republic and Yahoo! News:

Trump, incensed, took to Truth Social to rail against Leon’s decision.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation sues me for a Ballroom that is under budget, ahead of schedule, being built at no cost to the Taxpayer, and will be the finest Building of its kind anywhere in the World. I then get sued by them over the renovation of the dilapidated and structurally unsound former Kennedy Center, now, The Trump Kennedy Center (A show of Bipartisan Unity, a Republican and Democrat President!), where all I am doing is fixing, cleaning, running, and ‘sprucing up’ a terribly maintained, for many years,” Trump wrote

“Yet, The National Trust for Historic Preservation, a Radical Left Group of Lunatics whose funding was stopped by Congress in 2005, is not suing the Federal Reserve for a Building which has been decimated and destroyed, inside and out, by an incompetent and possibly corrupt Fed Chairman.”

Trump’s ballroom was initially projected to cost $200 million, and the price has since ballooned to double that.

Trump might think he is above needing oversight, but Judge Leon has other ideas -- and unlike Trump -- he seems to take the role of Congress seriously. From CNN/AOL:

Throughout the 35-page ruling, Leon repeatedly emphasized that Congress has a role to play in the project.

“The President may at any time go to Congress to obtain express authority to construct a ballroom and to do so with private funds,” Leon wrote. “Indeed, Congress may even choose to appropriate funds for the ballroom, or at least decide that some other funding scheme is acceptable.”

“Either way, Congress will thereby retain its authority over the nation’s property and its oversight over the Government’s spending,” the judge wrote. “And the American people will benefit from the branches of Government exercising their constitutionally prescribed roles. Not a bad outcome, that!”

Leon seemed to go out of his way to make the ruling palatable to Trump -- like trying to make a 5-year-old believe spinach really does taste good. The judge also took pains to point out the White House relied on flawed legal arguments -- suggesting perhaps that the president wasn't at fault; he just needed better lawyers. Here's more from CNN/AOL:

In ruling against Trump, Leon also said the president had improperly relied on a federal law that gives presidents the authority to use congressional funds for the “care, maintenance, repair” and “alteration” of the White House, among other things, to justify his decision to unilaterally move ahead with construction.

That law, the judge said, does not allow for the “wholesale demolition of entire buildings and construction of new ones.”

“Under defendants’ reading, virtually any change to the White House could be framed as an ‘alteration’ or ‘improvement,’” he wrote. “Indeed, some might even view tearing down the White House and building a modem skyscraper in its place as an ‘improvement.’”

Let's hope the judge doesn't give Trump any ideas. Speaking of which, this court case clearly goes beyond the White House, so a number of interested parties shared thoughts about what transpired yesterday:

Carol Quillen, the president and CEO of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, meanwhile, called Tuesday’s ruling “a win for the American people.”

“We are pleased with Judge Leon’s ruling today to order a halt to any further ballroom construction until the administration complies with the law and obtains express authorization to go forward,” she said.

In a phone interview with CNN, Rep. Jared Huffman of California, the top Democrat on the House Committee on Natural Resources, which would have some jurisdiction over the project should it ultimately come to Congress, said he planned to be “very actively engaged” going forward.

“I think there’s no other way to read this; they have to come to Congress. I know they hate doing this, but we are not potted plants in the legislative,” Huffman said. 

What's coming next? Here's a summary from CNN/AOL:

The White House has repeatedly said that any above-grade construction could begin as soon as April – and the ruling also comes days before a key commission stacked with Trump loyalists is expected to green-light the plans.

The National Capital Planning Commission, which oversees planning for federal buildings and land in the nation’s capital, is set to hold a final vote on the project Thursday morning that is widely expected to pass despite thousands of public comments overwhelmingly opposing the plans. 

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

From Rush Limbaugh to Jesse James, Missouri has a history of supporting conservatives, but a "No Kings" traffic jam revealed widespread resistance to Trump

"No Kings" protests in St. Louis, MO (See more below.)


Our Legal Schnauzer family had a Saturday unlike anything we had ever experienced. We got stuck in a traffic jam and wound up having a blast. 

How did that happen? It started with a late-morning lunch at one of our favorite Mexican restaurants. Our route home takes us by one of the major shopping malls in the region, but that doesn't normally cause a bottleneck on a lazy Saturday. But as we approached the mall this time, traffic started slowing down and eventually came to a halt.

As impatient drivers started cutting through side streets, we couldn't figure out what was happening. Finally, we could see that the traffic light ahead was changing, but nobody was moving. As devoted liberals, we knew it was No Kings Day, but in this conservative part of conservative Missouri, we figured that would be a pretty sleepy event. We were delighted to be proved wrong about that.

Why were our expectations low for a day that was all about protesting the policies and incompetence of the Donald Trump administration? Missouri has voted solidly for Trump all three times he has been on a presidential ballot -- 56.8 % to 38.1 % over Hillary Clinton in 2016, 56.8 % to 41.4 % over Joe Biden in 2020, and  58.5 % to 40.1 % percent over Kamala Harris in 2024. In other words, national elections here are as uninteresting as they are in Alabama and most of the Deep South -- with the occasional exception of Georgia or Florida. 

You might say Missouri comes by its conservatism honestly. Right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh grew up in Cape Girardeau in the southeast corner of the state, and upon his death in 2021, his home state moved to establish an annual Rush Limbaugh Day. The legislation passed the Missouri House, but in a sign that state Democrats still have a spine, was removed during negotiations.

In my post about the Limbaugh Day issue, I noted the state also produced a couple of other notorious conservatives -- the outlaw pair of Frank and Jesse James. Heck, I wrote, why not honor them as products  of the state's "Little Dixie" region. This is from my post that essentially drew comparisons between Rush Limbaugh and the James brothers:

"No Kings" protests in Springfield, MO






Monday, March 30, 2026

From liberal enclaves to Republican strongholds, 'No Kings Day' protests were a mix of comedy, exuberance, resistance, and hope -- crossing ideological boundaries

Top signs from "No Kings Day" (Meidas Touch Network -- See more below.)


Attendance estimates from  Saturday's "No Kings Day" protests from around the country paint a hopeful sign for Democrats. But perhaps the most hopeful signs came from evidence that sizable numbers of Republicans joined liberals to voice their displeasure with the policies and incompetence of the Donald Trump administration. This is from a "No Kings" summary at The Other 98%, a progressive Facebook page:

The third No Kings protest just happened. It was the most massive one yet. By far. More than 3,300 events in all 50 states. From New York City, with its 8.5 million residents, to Driggs, Idaho, a town of fewer than 2,000 people in a state Trump won with 66% of the vote.
Almost half the protests took place in Republican strongholds. Texas, Florida, and Ohio each had more than 100 events. Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah were in the double digits. People showed up in places where showing up takes guts.

We will take a closer look at signs the left and right joined hands for this event. But The Other 98% does an  excellent job of describing the exuberance and ideological breadth that has come to define a movement of those willing to fight back against the excesses of the Trump White House and the cowardice of the Republican Party, especially in Congress:

Bruce Springsteen played the flagship rally at the Minnesota State Capitol, the state where ICE agents killed two American citizens and sparked the entire movement. He performed his new single about those killings and told the crowd: "Your strength and your commitment told us that this was still America. And this reactionary nightmare, and these invasions of American cities, will not stand."
"It's time to say no to kings. It's time to say no to Donald Trump," Robert De Niro told the crowd in New York.
In Washington, hundreds marched past the Lincoln Memorial carrying signs reading "Put down the crown, clown" and "Regime change begins at home." Providence, R.I., alone drew an estimated 20,000. Massachusetts had more than 160 events. Philadelphia shut down roadways. Chicago packed Grant Park.
And it went global. Thousands marched in Rome. Paris had its own rally. Protests popped up across more than a dozen countries.

Estimated attendance for "No Kings Day" events in the United States was 8 to 9 million. Why did people show up in such numbers? That question was posed to a number of individuals at sites around the country:

One protester in Minneapolis kept it simple when asked why he came out: "Democracy is under threat." Another held a sign that said "So bad, even introverts are here."
The White House dismissed it all as the product of "leftist funding networks" with little real public support. Millions of people in the streets across all 50 states and a dozen countries. Little real public support.
They're scared. They should be. This movement started last summer. It grew in the fall. And yesterday it got bigger than anyone predicted. That's not fizzling. That's building.
Red towns showed up. Blue cities showed up. Small towns in Alaska showed up. Rural Montana showed up. This isn't a coastal elite thing anymore. This is everywhere. This is everyone.

What about the bipartisan nature of Saturday's protests? On the surface, it appears to be bad news for Republicans. Nina Giraldo, of CNN, takes a closer look at the issue:

“No Kings” protesters marched through suburbs, major cities and small towns across the US, carrying signs and showing off inflatable costumes. Almost half of protests took place in GOP strongholds, according to event organizers.







 




Friday, March 27, 2026

Officials keep Donald Trump entertained by spoon-feeding him "war porn" that features "stuff blowing up," while president blames Pete Hegseth for Iran war


America's war-time "leadership," in the form of President Donald Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, is woefully unprepared for the conflict it started with Iran, according to a post at Facebook from longtime Alabama attorney and entrepreneur Donald V. Watkins. It is titled "Trump and Hegseth were unprepared for war." Trump is such a dazed warrior that he allows his staff to spoon-feed him daily videos of war highlights that apparently are designed to give our president the false impression that he is winning the war.

Watkins long has been known in legal circles as one of the nation's leading practitioners in a variety of areas, especially criminal defense and civil rights. He is retired from law and now lives in California, but he remains engaged with the public on a number of fronts. One is investigative journalism, where he has broken dozens of important stories on corruption in the American South, especially in regards to  Southern Company -- the second largest utility in the U.S., and its affiliates in Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia.  

The public especially should be aware of Watkins' in-depth reporting on cost overruns and shoddy workmanship at Southern Company facilities in Georgia and Mississippi. Watkins describes the Vogtle Nuclear Power Plant in Waynesboro, GA, as a "nuclear radiation and contamination deathtrap." Construction of the Kemper coal gasification plant in Mississippi was so far over budget and behind schedule that Southern Company abandoned the project and demolished what had been built

Beyond journalism, Watkins remains active in business, especially in the energy sector, where he has far-flung interests in Africa, with experiences in the Middle East. Watkins cites these connections as the basis for his reporting on the U.S.-Israel joint attack on Iran, which includes multiple reports that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is dead, killed by an Iranian missile strike on his home early in the war. 

Watkins recently reported on his introduction to intelligence gathering in the Middle East, which has helped inform his journalism on Netanyahu's death and related stories. We will have more on these subjects in upcoming posts. 

For now, let's report on the pitiful state of America's haphazard war effort in Iran. Watkins writes:

The New York Times reports that many of the 13 military bases in the Middle East that were used by American troops are all but uninhabitable. The ones in Kuwait, which is next door to Iran, have suffered perhaps the most damage.
Iranian officials have even accused the U.S. military of using civilians as human shields by putting American troops in hotels.
President Donald Trump is not getting the full picture of how badly this war is going for him. Instead, Trump is getting a highlight reel of war porn, as he watches our tax dollars blow things up for two minutes every day.
After two decades of watching America uncontestedly bomb the poorest people in the world, Trump and Pete Hegseth couldn’t even conceive of an enemy with a sophisticated military and the ability to fight back, despite all the evidence to the contrary.
Trump and Hegseth took no preparations and expected no reprisals. They didn't evacuate anyone from the Middle East until AFTER the war had started. They didn't bother to prepare current U.S. officials, and a former official told the news outlet that the president is being fed a daily video mash-up summarizing the most successful strikes on Iranian targets over the previous 48 hours of the military operation in the Middle East, now in its fourth week. 
The footage depicts “stuff blowing up,” one official revealed, while others said Trump’s allies are concerned that the clips may not fully capture the overall situation on the ground.  
Trump and Hegseth attacked Iran because they are cowards and bullies. They thought that they could impose their will on Iran by simply killing one old man.
They were wrong, and now they’ve started a fire that they cannot put out with lies and bombs.

As for the war porn that apparently keeps Trump entertained and ill informed, The Daily Beast and Yahoo! News, in a jointly published report, provide more details under the headline "Childish Way Trump's Officials Brief Him on War is Leaked": 

Donald Trump’s top war goons are briefing the president with two-minute-long highlight reels showing front-line victories in the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, U.S. officials told NBC News.

Three current U.S. officials and a former official told the news outlet that the president is being fed a daily video mash-up summarizing the most successful strikes on Iranian targets over the previous 48 hours of the military operation in the Middle East, now in its fourth week.

The footage depicts “stuff blowing up,” one official revealed, while others said Trump’s allies are concerned that the clips may not fully capture the overall situation on the ground.

A current official said Trump is shown a condensed video montage because “we can’t tell him every single thing that happens.” The official added that the videos tended to emphasize U.S. successes, as those segments typically received a better response from the president’s aides.

The revelation comes at a time when the Trump administration faces backlash for sharing bizarre video-game mashups of the Trump administration’s lethal strikes on Iran. Trump’s team has dished out countless clips that verge on the gamification of real-life combat since launching coordinated strikes with Israel on Iran on February 28. 

The use of edited combat footage reflects a broader trend in modern warfare, where curated clips of battlefield victories are used to shape public perception. In the Ukraine-Russia war, both sides have circulated visually compelling videos of strikes and front-line operations to showcase battlefield success, generate clicks and social media buzz, support recruitment efforts, and project strength to adversaries.

According to Politico, one senior official bragged that the Trump administration’s videos racked up more than 3 billion impressions within four days. 

The U.S. war effort sounds like a combination of "Gamer" and "Weekend at Bernie's." At first thought, that hardly is comforting. But upon further review, Americans might be better off with Trump kept in the dark. After all, when is the last time he showed he can run anything with some semblance of competence? I'm not sure that has ever happened.

(To be continued)