Trump administration quietly shifts $352m in federal funds for White House ballroom
The Trump administration has reallocated $352 million in federal funds originally intended for the Secret Service to a controversial White House ballroom project, despite prior assurances from President Trump that it would be privately funded. These funds were drawn from the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," which stipulated they be used for Secret Service personnel, training, technology, and related costs, not construction.
Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe Trump administration has reallocated $352 million in federal funds originally intended for the Secret Service to a controversial White House ballroom project, despite prior assurances from President Trump that it would be privately funded. These funds were drawn from the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," which stipulated they be used for Secret Service personnel, training, technology, and related costs, not construction. The administration claims the project is essential for security, citing threats and the need for enhanced infrastructure. However, lawmakers have expressed concern, questioning the legality and transparency of using Secret Service funds for construction. Internal records suggest significant public money, including Secret Service funds, is being used, alongside private donations that have also drawn scrutiny for potential conflicts of interest.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedFunds were drawn from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which stipulates money for Secret Service personnel, training, technology, not construction.
Trump administration redirected $352m in federal funds for Secret Service to White House ballroom project.
Senator Thom Tillis states the fund redirection 'sounds like a different way to fund the East Wing project' and 'doesn't sound right'.
Congress explicitly refused to provide $1bn for the 'East Wing Modernization Project' (ballroom).
White House spokesperson claims the project is tied to security and funded by private donors.