In a move that has ignited a fierce political and cultural firestorm, President Donald Trump has announced plans to shutter the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for a two-year “restoration,” a decision critics denounce as the culmination of a hostile takeover of America’s most prestigious arts institution.
“The Trump Kennedy Center” and a $257 Million “Vision”
Trump announced the planned July 2026 closure on his Truth Social platform, stating the facility would close “in honor of the 250th Anniversary of our Country” for a “new and spectacular Entertainment Complex.” He referred to it as “The Trump Kennedy Center,” a name change the board he controls voted for in December 2025.
Kennedy Center President Richard Grenell, a Trump loyalist, praised the president’s “visionary leadership” and cited a historic $257 million congressional appropriation to address “decades of deferred maintenance.” He argued a full, temporary closure was the fastest path to making it the “finest Arts Institution in the world.”

A Kennedy Family Rebuke and a Boycott by Artists
The announcement was met with immediate scorn from the Kennedy family and the arts community it was built to honor. John F. Kennedy’s nephew, former Rep. Joe Kennedy III, called it a “trespass on the People’s will,” while the late president’s niece, Maria Shriver, mocked the rationale in a social media post.
The planned closure follows months of turmoil since Trump overhauled the board, declaring it too “woke,” and installed himself as chairman. The controversial renaming triggered a wave of cancellations from major artists, including composer Philip Glass, opera star Renée Fleming, and banjo virtuoso Béla Fleck. An October 2025 analysis by The Washington Post found ticket sales had declined since Trump assumed control.
From Honors Host to Funeral Director
The move marks a stark reversal for Trump, who bucked tradition by skipping the Kennedy Center Honors throughout his first term. In December 2025, he made history as the first president to emcee the Honors—a ceremony now followed by his announcement to potentially bury the institution bearing Kennedy’s name for two years.
The closure, ostensibly for renovation, is seen by critics as the final act in a political campaign to claim a Democratic icon’s legacy. Whether it reopens as a “spectacular” Trump-branded venue or remains a ghost of its former self will depend on a deeply divided board and an arts world that has already begun to turn its back.
















