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HomeWorldTrump’s $300 million ballroom is being built with cash from crypto, tech...

Trump’s $300 million ballroom is being built with cash from crypto, tech allies

Donors so far include some of the largest tech companies in the world — Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet Inc.’s Google, and Meta — as well as major crypto firms like Coinbase, Ripple Labs and Tether Holdings.

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President Donald Trump is constructing a $300 million White House ballroom with the force of a political campaign, tapping his former campaign finance director to raise money for the high-profile but controversial project.

Meredith O’Rourke and her team have fanned out across Washington to solicit donations from the executives and corporations that funded Trump’s 2024 campaign and inauguration, according to people familiar with the effort. She has connected with Republican lobbyists and their corporate clients to tout the opportunity to donate to a project the president has described as his gift to the country.

The White House has provided few financial details on the effort and O’Rourke didn’t respond to a request for comment. At a fundraising dinner on Oct. 15 for the project with top corporate executives and GOP donors, Trump suggested he’d already raised all the money needed from “friends” and would use the excess for other construction plans.

An excavator works to clear rubble after the East Wing of the White House in Washington on Oct. 23. Photographer: Eric Lee/Getty Images via Bloomberg

The ballroom donors so far include some of the largest tech companies in the world — Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp., Alphabet Inc.’s Google, and Meta Platforms Inc. — as well as major crypto firms like Coinbase Inc., Ripple Labs Inc. and Tether Holdings Ltd., according to the White House. Other contributors include longtime Trump donors like billionaires Steve Schwarzman and Miriam Adelson.

The checks are going to the Trust for the National Mall, a nonprofit partner of the National Park Service that helps restore and preserve historic landmarks. The charitable organization doesn’t have to disclose the names of its contributors, who are eligible for a tax deduction. The trust said its role is to manage private donations for the project.

Many of the companies donating to the White House ballroom have business before the government, ranging from major contracts and regulatory matters to ongoing Justice Department lawsuits and unapproved mergers.

“This is the pay-to-play room,” said Richard Painter, who served as the chief White House ethics lawyer under former President George W. Bush. “These companies want government contracts and regulatory concessions.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissed those allegations. “The same critics who are wrongly claiming there are conflicts of interests would complain if taxpayers were footing the bill,” she said, adding that the donors come from a wide array of American companies who are giving to improve the White House for years to come.

None of the companies have publicly disclosed how much money they are giving to the effort. T-Mobile US Inc. in a statement confirmed it donated money to the Trust for the National Mall, but said it does not have a role in how those funds are used or what happens with the ballroom. A Coinbase spokesperson confirmed the company gave money to the nonprofit. Microsoft confirmed it contributed money to the ballroom project, and Meta said it does not have “specifics” to share.

Defense company Lockheed Martin said it is “grateful for the opportunity to help bring the president’s vision to reality and make this addition to the people’s house, a powerful symbol of the American ideals we work to defend every day.”

The other companies did not respond to requests for comment.

“I have so many friends, and so many of you have been really, really generous,” Trump told the Oct. 15 White House dinner to celebrate the ballroom project. “I mean, a couple of you, I’m sitting here saying, ‘Sir, would $25 million be appropriate?’ I said, ‘I’ll take it.’”

 

President Donald Trump greets guests during a ballroom fundraising dinner in the East Room of the White House on Oct. 15 | Bloomberg

Demolition began this week to replace the East Wing with the ballroom, which Trump has said will be 90,000 square feet (8,400 square meters) and hold 1,000 people. His estimates of the cost have grown from $200 million to as much as $350 million. The White House has also said Trump is contributing to the ballroom project, though it hasn’t said how much.

Starting with the major tech CEOs standing with Trump at his inauguration, some of the world’s most valuable companies have spent months courting the new administration. They have already reaped some rewards — but they are looking for more wins.

Apple, maker of the iPhone, benefited from Trump’s decision in April to exempt smartphones and other electronics from his tariffs but still faces an antitrust case.

The Federal Trade Commission, meanwhile, has sued Meta alleging it has an illegal monopoly over the social media market. CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who has developed a bond with Trump, successfully urged the president to target Europe over its taxation of the big tech companies.

“Big Tech CEOs have bought themselves a seat at Trump’s table, and they’re paying for the renovation of that table with multi-million-dollar checks,” said Sacha Haworth, executive director of the Tech Oversight Project. “Make no mistake about what’s happening: Apple, Meta, Amazon, and Google are bankrolling pageantry and luxury for an administration that’s making a mockery of ethical standards and policymaking for the people.”

President Trump holds a rendering of the planned White House Ballroom extension in the Oval Office on Oct. 22 | Bloomberg

Google gave $22 million to the Trust for the National Mall on Trump’s behalf as part of a legal settlement over the president being banned from YouTube in 2021, according to court documents. That was more than double the $9.4 million in donations the Trust reported for 2024.

Several of the companies have mergers pending before the government, including Comcast Corp., which is weighing a bid for Warner Bros. Discovery Inc., and Union Pacific, which is seeking to merge with Norfolk Southern.

Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp., another donor, has been laying off workers as the government significantly pares back its spending on consulting services.

Source: Bloomberg

Coinbase, Ripple and Tether are lobbying lawmakers to pass market-structure legislation that would benefit the crypto industry. The digital assets lobby played a huge role in the 2024 elections, donating millions to key races across the country.

Meanwhile, defense giants and startups alike donated to the effort. Legacy defense companies are wrangling with new players like Palantir Technologies Inc. for billions over billions of dollars in contracts. Lockheed Martin and Palantir both gave money to the ballroom.

(Reporting by Emily Birnbaum and Bill Allison with assistance from Catherine Lucey)

Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Bloomberg news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

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