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Chelsea Clinton blasted President Donald Trump in a new op-ed for USA Today, accusing him of showing a “disregard for history” and taking a “wrecking ball to our heritage” with major White House renovations — including demolition of part of the East Wing to build a new ballroom.
“A disregard for history is a defining trait of President Trump’s second administration,” Clinton wrote Thursday, criticizing the East Wing demolition, changes at the Smithsonian, and the administration’s push to remove diversity and inclusion programs across federal agencies, Fox News reported.
The former first daughter, who moved into the White House at age 12 when her father, Bill Clinton, became president in 1993, said she always understood the mansion didn’t belong to her family.
“Renovations aren’t inherently objectionable because of who orders them or who pays for them,” Clinton wrote. “But authority is not the same as stewardship. Stewardship requires transparency, consultation and an accounting for history.”
Clinton’s op-ed zeroed in on the $250 million project to replace part of the East Wing with a privately funded ballroom — a move she said symbolizes “what happens when we take a wrecking ball to our heritage.”
The backlash online quickly turned political. Conservative commentators mocked Clinton’s remarks, reminding her of scandals surrounding her father’s presidency.
“Your dad turned the White House into his own personal Burning Man tent, and we all get it,” one commentator wrote.
Another added, “Of all the people I want to hear from least on the subject of desecrating the White House, it’s anyone with the surname Clinton.”
Trump has defended the project as a necessary modernization, calling it a “world-class” facility that will host diplomatic and cultural events. He has said the ballroom is being funded entirely through private donations and personal contributions.
The White House says the new space will accommodate hundreds more guests than the East Room or State Dining Room can hold, and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called the backlash “fake outrage.”
“Nearly every single president who’s lived in this beautiful White House behind me has made modernizations and renovations of their own,” Leavitt told Fox News. “Presidents for decades have joked about wishing they had a larger event space here at the White House.”
Still, the renovations have sparked strong reactions — particularly from the Clinton family.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoed her daughter’s criticism in a post on X this week, writing, “It’s not his house. It’s your house. And he’s destroying it.”
A New York Times report described images of the East Wing demolition as “jarring,” and several historic preservation groups have raised concerns about the project’s impact on the White House’s architectural legacy.
The East Wing, first added under Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1942, has housed the First Lady’s offices, the Visitors’ Entrance, and the underground bunker known as the Presidential Emergency Operations Center.
Trump’s renovation plans call for relocating those operations and creating a new event hall capable of holding 1,200 guests.
Despite the criticism, Chelsea Clinton’s op-ed went viral, drawing millions of views across social media platforms and reigniting debate about Trump’s ongoing redesigns of presidential landmarks.
Supporters say the upgrades will leave a lasting legacy of modernization, while critics view them as yet another example of Trump reshaping American institutions in his image.
As demolition continues on the East Wing, the ballroom remains on track for completion in late 2026 — a timeline that could see it open before the end of Trump’s second term.
