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JUST IN; Supreme Court rules Donald Trump’s White House East Wing demolition illegal, orders immediate rebuild Full details ⤵️
JUST IN; Supreme Court rules Donald Trump’s White House East Wing demolition illegal, orders immediate rebuild
Full details ⤵️
### **JUST IN: Legal Fight Erupts Over Trump’s White House East Wing Demolition — Claims Illegal, Legal Battle Intensifies**
**Washington, D.C. —** A heated legal battle is unfolding over the demolition of the White House’s historic East Wing after President Donald Trump’s administration cleared the structure last year to make way for a new 90,000-square-foot state ballroom. Preservationists and legal experts argue the demolition was unlawful and are pushing for significant court action. *However, no U.S. Supreme Court ruling has yet declared the demolition illegal or ordered a rebuild.*
The dispute centers on whether the administration bypassed established legal processes governing changes to federal buildings in the nation’s capital. Critics — including the National Trust for Historic Preservation — maintain that the demolition and subsequent plans for construction violated multiple federal protections by advancing work without prior approval from congressional authority and historic preservation bodies. They have sued in federal court seeking to halt the project and compel compliance with required reviews
At a recent hearing before U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington, D.C., the administration’s legal justification drew strong skepticism. Judge Leon questioned whether existing statutes giving the president authority to “repair, alter, refurnish and improve” the White House could reasonably be interpreted to authorize the wholesale demolition of the East Wing for a multihundred-million-dollar ballroom project. “Come on. Be serious,” the judge told a Justice Department lawyer when asked to accept the broad interpretation
The Trump administration argues it is acting within its prerogatives, pointing to historical renovations and asserting that the project — privately funded and designed to accommodate large formal events — serves broader needs. The Department of Justice has also advanced a novel claim that continuing construction is necessary for national security reasons, citing impacts on Secret Service operations during a paused build.
Preservationists counter that the demolition was rushed without proper involvement from the National Capital Planning Commission or public comment, as is customary on major federal building projects, and that the White House should face legal accountability for ignoring standard processes.
**What’s next:** Judge Leon has indicated he may rule soon on whether to issue an injunction to halt further work until the matter is fully adjudicated. If a ruling goes against the administration, it is expected to be appealed — and only then *could* higher courts, including potentially the Supreme Court, weigh in. But as of now, no such Supreme Court decision has been issued.