GOP fumes as Trump drops a 'political landmine' at the worst time

GOP fumes as Trump drops a 'political landmine' at the worst time
Senate Majority Leader John Thune pushes his glasses up as he speaks to reporters outside his office on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., October 14, 2025. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

Senate Majority Leader John Thune pushes his glasses up as he speaks to reporters outside his office on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., October 14, 2025. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

Trump

Republican senators this week are growing fearful, according to The Hill, as President Donald Trump saddles them with an exorbitantly expensive "political landmine" at a time when it could blow up both budget talks and economic messaging for the midterms.

Trump and his administration have made a renewed push to get lawmakers on board with his costly and controversial White House ballroom, claiming that it is necessary for security reasons after the Correspondents' Dinner shooting. While some in the GOP have gotten in line and backed calls for Congress to set aside taxpayer funds for the project, others are hesitant, especially after the latest proposal called for an additional $1 billion on top of the $400 million already in place for construction costs.

These concerned Republicans echoed fears that the proposal would make the party look even more tone deaf heading into the midterms, as voters consistently tell pollsters that they are most focused on inflation and high prices.

"A Republican proposal to spend $1 billion in taxpayer money on security for the White House ballroom has become a political landmine in the Senate debate over funding Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol for the next three and a half years," The Hill reported on Thursday. "Before the Senate Judiciary Committee released its bill, Republican senators warned that using taxpayer money to pay for the ballroom would be a dumb move in an election year where GOP candidates are already facing headwinds over the issue of affordability."

Speaking with the outlet, Sen. Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, tried to have things both ways, supporting the construction of the ballroom — which caused widespread outrage after Trump demolished the East Wing of the White House without approval — but only if it is done exclusively with private donations, as the president initially claimed.

“I need to know what the fully burdened cost of this building project is because it sounds like it’s double what it was just a few months ago,” Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican and outspoken Trump critic, said, adding that "It represents an exposure [to political backlash], no doubt about it."

Brian Darling, a GOP strategist and former Senate aide, urged Republicans in the Senate to "pump the brakes" on the ballroom issue. Even if they approve funds strictly for security, he warned, it would still be controversial to the public.

"The fact that it’s linked to the ballroom makes it controversial,” Darling told The Hill. “Congress might give them the money, but it’s an unnecessary controversy because the way it was marketed [as] basically a billion-dollar ballroom. Who knows what else gets loaded into it that might cause problems..."

He added: "That’s a problem. That’s not a good way to market this. If you’re spending all this money to fortify the White House, nobody bats an eye. If it’s $1 billion for the ballroom, that creates huge problems. The fact that Congress is going to run an enormous debt this year, it’s hard to market a billion-dollar ballroom. It’s definitely going to slow this process down.”

{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}
@2026 - AlterNet Media Inc. All Rights Reserved. - "Poynter" fonts provided by fontsempire.com.