CELEBRITY
Donald Trump’s hand picked board of sycophants doesn’t have the authority to rename the Kennedy Center. What they are doing is not only a disgrace to the memory and legacy of John F. Kennedy, it’s illegal. They will be held accountable and Trump’s name will be torn down and tossed in garbage where it belongs — And the Law Is Clear 👉 Learn what happened and demand accountability
Donald Trump’s hand picked board of sycophants doesn’t have the authority to rename the Kennedy Center. What they are doing is not only a disgrace to the memory and legacy of John F. Kennedy, it’s illegal. They will be held accountable and Trump’s name will be torn down and tossed in garbage where it belongs — And the Law Is Clear
👉 Learn what happened and demand accountability
**The Kennedy Center Cannot Be Renamed by Political Fiat — And the Law Is Clear**
Recent claims that a politically aligned board could rename the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts have sparked outrage — and for good reason. The Kennedy Center is not a private venue subject to branding whims. It is a federally chartered national memorial, established by Congress in 1958 and formally named in honor of President John F. Kennedy by statute after his assassination.
That legal reality matters. The Center’s name is not controlled by any president, political appointee, or board of trustees, no matter how loyal or ideological they may be. Only Congress has the authority to alter the name of a federal memorial created by law. Any attempt to do so without congressional action would be legally invalid and subject to challenge.
Beyond legality, the controversy cuts deeper. John F. Kennedy’s legacy is inseparable from the Center’s mission to promote arts, culture, and civic life beyond partisan politics. Using the institution as a vehicle for political self-glorification undermines that purpose and disrespects the memory it was created to preserve.
Accountability is not optional in a system governed by law. If officials or board members exceed their authority, those actions can be reversed, challenged, and corrected. Names placed unlawfully can be removed just as easily — not through outrage alone, but through the legal mechanisms designed to protect public institutions from abuse.
This is not about party preference. It is about the rule of law, respect for democratic institutions, and safeguarding national memorials from being turned into political trophies. The Kennedy Center belongs to the American people, and its name cannot be rewritten by decree.
The facts are clear. The law is clear. And so is the responsibility to demand accountability when lines are crossed.