Appeals court rules on request to restore Trump name to Kennedy Center

Joe Biden and Jill Biden attend the 47th Kennedy Center Honors, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. (Official White House photo by Oliver Contreras)
The Kennedy Center, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. (White House photo)

A federal appeals court has rejected a request to restore the Trump name to the arts center previously known as the Kennedy Center while the court fight over the issue develops.

The Washington Examiner reported the leftist U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said there would be no “irreparable harm” from having the Trump name, which already has been removed, off the building for the duration of the dispute.

It was an order from Judge Christopher Cooper that demanded all references to President Donald Trump be removed of the center’s building, website and promotional materials.

The Obama-appointed judge has a long history of antagonism toward Trump, and his micromanagement of the naming of the building, which is badly in need of major repairs, follows suit.

Two of the three judges issuing the opinion, which supported the lower court Obama judge, also were appointed by Obama.

Trump had announced plans to close the center for a two-year period to allow renovations and restorations, projects that likely would conflict with public use of the building during that time, but once again, Cooper jumped into micromanaging and ordered that the building stay open during the construction work.

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