Just what we need, right?
On the same day that the US Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that inflation spiked at its fastest monthly rate in four years, the Trump administration unveiled renderings of Donald Trump’s proposed gold-covered 250-foot-tall arch to be built at Memorial Circle in Washington, DC.
The renderings, which were produced by architecture firm
Harrison Design and posted on social media by
the White House’s rapid response account, show a gigantic arch that would be
flanked on its corners by four gold lions and topped by a 60-foot-tall gold
statue of what appears to be an angel.
According to a Friday report in The Washington Post,
some preservationists have expressed concerns that the arch, which would be
more than twice the height of the Lincoln Monument, would disproportionately
tower over the DC skyline, and would block views of Arlington National
Cemetery.
Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) slammed the president for pushing construction of a gaudy gold-covered arch at a time when Americans are struggling due to the cost-of-living crisis worsened by his war in Iran.
“While Americans worry about skyrocketing costs and another
endless war,” he wrote in
a social media post, “President Trump is focused on a taxpayer-funded vanity
project that would choke traffic, block our skyline, and tower over sacred
ground where those who served our nation are buried, including my own parents
and sister.”
Beyer added that the arch is “about Donald Trump’s ego,” and
vowed, “we’re going to stop it.”
Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) responded to the renderings
by reminding the White House that
“Americans can’t afford groceries.”
Progressive activist Nina Turner had a
similar reaction to Clark, posting that
“people can’t afford rent” in response to the renderings.
Podcaster Brian Taylor Cohen contrasted the
renderings of the arch with a statement Trump
made earlier this month when he said “it’s not possible” for the federal
government “to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare,
all these individual things,” because it needs to fund wars instead.
University of Missouri English professor Karen Piper also
remarked on the opportunity cost of building the arch, along with other
assorted Trump projects.
“This is why they’re going to take away your Social Security,
saying we can’t afford it,” she wrote.
“Ballrooms, arches, and Don Jr. draining the Treasury.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has
been named as a contender for the Democratic Party’s 2028 presidential
nomination, responded to the arch renderings by accusing Trump of
“doing everything he can to wreck this country—this time with our nation’s
capital.”
Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) took issue with the decision
to inscribe the phrase “one nation under God” at the top of the arch.
“That phrase came from Cold War propaganda,
not our Founders,” observed Huffman. “Trump stamping it on his vanity
arch tells you everything about what this project is: a Christian nationalist
monument, paid for with your tax dollars.”
