The 'perfect metaphor' for Trump’s 'increasingly dire' blunders

The 'perfect metaphor' for Trump’s 'increasingly dire' blunders
U.S. President Donald Trump and lady Melania Trump depart for travel to Texas to tour areas affected by deadly flash flooding, from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 11, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
U.S. President Donald Trump and lady Melania Trump depart for travel to Texas to tour areas affected by deadly flash flooding, from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 11, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
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The i Paper Columnist James Moules reports President Donald Trump’s enigmatic proposed ballroom is currently about as stalled as his agenda — which is fitting.

“Donald Trump’s vast White House ballroom expansion is facing delays thanks to a deluge of blistering public criticism that likened the design to a ‘brothel’ and a ‘Vegas casino,’” reports Moules. “A final vote on the plans by the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC), the commission overseeing the changes, was due to be held on Thursday, but has been pushed back to 2 April after receiving more than 32,000 public responses – mostly against the project.”

It’s a setback that Moules said reflects Trump’s “increasingly dire” domestic picture, with plummeting approval making Republicans increasingly fret about the November midterms.

“There definitely is a conflation between general negative sentiment towards Trump and the ballroom,” Dr Louis Bromfield of Swansea University told The i Paper. “Primarily, the ballroom is transparently grand, expensive and ostentatious. The implementation of it flies laughably in the face of the cost-of-living issues many Americans are facing. There is an almost depressingly comical contrast between the luxurious spending and gold-covered decoration of the Trump White House and the harsh reality on the ground for millions of Americans.”

Amid the 9,000 pages of public feedback against the project are opinions describing the ballroom as a “gold, gilded edifice to one man’s ego, an architectural ascent to his self-identification as a royal monarch.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told The New York Times that the contemptuous comments stemmed from an “organized campaign of Trump-deranged liberals,” but Bromfield said “Trump’s grip on the GOP is slipping, and the ballroom is a perfect metaphor for this.”

“Trump is the weakest he’s ever been since he took office in 2016,” Bromfield added. “His base is splintering, he has never been so unpopular, and his actions … are undermining some of the messages that resonated with voters the most on the campaign trail.”

Factors contributing to Trump’s perishing favorability among U.S. citizens include his failures to reduce the cost of living, the chaos and incrimination of Trump’s name in the Epstein files, and now the invasion of Iran, which undermines his earlier pledges to end “forever wars.”

Dr Georgios Samaras of King’s College London told The i Paper: “If this pattern continues, no one should be surprised if Trump resorts to bombing other countries whenever domestic pressure mounts. This is a distraction through violence.”

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