Up on the
Roof, Trump Surveys the Home He’s Making His Own
White House
reporters looked up from the driveway to see a familiar figure in a most
unfamiliar location.
Katie Rogers
By Katie
Rogers
Katie Rogers
is a White House reporter. She reported from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/05/us/politics/trump-white-house-stroll.html
Aug. 5, 2025
President
Trump was on the roof.
As a
confused group of reporters assembled below him on Tuesday morning, Mr. Trump
strolled around on top of the White House, stopping somewhere above the James
S. Brady Press Briefing Room — now only occasionally a venue for taking
questions — to tell his audience that he was “taking a little walk” in service
of his latest home improvement project: a large ballroom.
“It’s just
another way to spend my money for the country,” Mr. Trump shouted. He was
getting a bird’s-eye view of where the $200 million White House ballroom he has
proposed building would go, according to the White House.
The
president ignored follow-up questions — one reporter shouted “WHAT DOES THAT
MEAN?” after the president appeared to be making a circular gesture with his
arms and hands and saying “something beautiful.” Mr. Trump did not answer
before continuing a 20-minute walkabout that included standing on the roof near
the Oval Office to survey the newly paved Rose Garden.
What looked
like a casual stroll was actually a heavily secured appearance: The area around
the building was locked down and Secret Service agents, including members of
the agency’s counter-sniper team, accompanied Mr. Trump on his walk.
The
construction of a ballroom is not the most pressing issue facing Mr. Trump or
his fellow Republicans, but it’s a pretty good distraction. (Several
conservative lawmakers are spending their August recesses either avoiding
constituents in their districts or getting screamed at over the economically
damaging details of domestic policy legislation that Mr. Trump pressured
Republicans to ram through Congress.)
It appears
that Mr. Trump’s respite from the tumult — some of which he has wrought — is to
ensconce himself in a White House that is rapidly changing from the
taxpayer-funded people’s house to one that resembles one of the Louis
XIV-inspired properties in his portfolio.
On social
media, Mr. Trump has referred to these as “‘fun’ projects I do while thinking
about the World Economy, the United States, China, Russia, and lots of other
Countries, places, and events.”
In that
vein, Mr. Trump, a creature of habit, has occupied himself by festooning the
Oval Office with golden embellishments, urns, baskets and coasters embossed
with his last name. He has planted large American flags on the lawn.
During Mr.
Trump’s first term, he spent quite a bit of time at the Trump International
Hotel, holding court for family members, prominent conservatives and
journalists. But now, with the hotel closed, he appears to be using the White
House for a similar purpose.
Mr. Trump
remains a homebody with a deep distrust of situations he does not control.
Lately, he has turned his attention away from holding rallies or public events
to gin up political support and toward the altering of a White House complex he
has in turns complimented as grand and maligned as outdated. Visitors are still
allowed on tours, and there is no mistaking who lives upstairs.
He has
overseen the paving over of the Rose Garden, a historic presidential venue that
Melania Trump, the first lady, had once revamped with the help of historians,
architects and designers. At her direction, they replanted roses, removed
several problematic crab apple trees that had bedeviled designers since the
Reagan administration and installed a limestone walkway.
In 2020,
Mrs. Trump also oversaw the installation of the first piece of art from an
Asian American artist to be included in the White House collection. That statue
is no longer in the Rose Garden. A White House official, speaking on the
condition of anonymity to not disclose internal plans, said that the piece was
being polished. But the official did not know when or if it would be returned
to the newly paved garden.
On Tuesday,
the East Wing did not respond to a request for comment about whether the first
lady supported the changes to a project that took a year and a half to design
and revamp, and just days to partially pave over. Other questions, including
one about what would become of a suite of East Wing offices that appear to be
in the way of the proposed ballroom, were forwarded to the West Wing.
And most
recently, there is the ballroom, the rendering of which has a distinct
resemblance to the event space at Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club, his gilded
fortress in Palm Beach. The Mar-a-Lago ballroom has long been a space for
fund-raisers, dinners and weddings, and its patio is where Mr. Trump enjoys a
round of applause before taking his seat at dinner. The people who assemble
there have paid for the privilege of an event where Mr. Trump appears as either
the de facto maître d’ or the centerpiece the party revolves around.
In the Trump
White House, people who have given money to the president’s cryptocurrency
business have been invited for dinner. Questions about who is funding the
ballroom, however, are mostly unanswered. White House officials said the
president and “other patriot donors” would pay for the renovations, but
declined to give details.
Noah
Bookbinder, the president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in
Washington, or CREW, said the donor funding plan was “highly unusual.”
“There is
certainly a risk that donors to this project, which Donald Trump has made clear
is important to him, could see it as a way to curry favor with the
administration,” he said.
During his
walkabout on Tuesday, Mr. Trump seemed to say he would be paying for the
90,000-square-foot project, which is almost twice the size of the White House
residence.
“Anything I
do is financed by me; in other words, contributed,” Mr. Trump told reporters.
“Just like my salary is contributed. But nobody ever mentions that.”
And now, a
quick fact check: Mr. Trump’s first-term White House announced that he
partially donated his salary to agencies, including the Department of
Education. But his donations declined over the course of his first term, and he
reported no charitable giving in 2020, according to his tax returns. The White
House did not respond to a request for comment about how he planned to donate
his salary this year.
Maggie
Haberman and Doug Mills contributed reporting.


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