
Donald Trump's Sculpture Garden Is One Step Closer To Reality
The bill, which was passed by Congress on Thursday, includes a provision for $40 million to be left available for the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for the "procurement of statues" through the fiscal year 2028.
Newsweek contacted the NEH via email for comment.
The sculpture garden is one of Trump's key priorities ahead of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence next year. It was first announced in an Executive Order during his first term in 2021.
The order said that the garden would be built to "reflect the awesome splendor of our country's timeless exceptionalism."
The order added: "It will be a place where citizens, young and old, can renew their vision of greatness and take up the challenge that I gave every American in my first address to Congress, to 'believe in yourselves, believe in your future, and believe, once more, in America.'"
The NEH said in April that the garden will feature life-size statues of 250 "great individuals from America's past who have contributed to our cultural, scientific, economic, and political heritage."
It added that it will "create a public space where Americans can gather to learn about and honor American heroes."
The agency said it would give selected artists awards of up to $200,000 per statue for the design and creation of up to three works made of marble, granite, bronze, copper, or brass.
The NEH said the designs must represent "historical significant" figures identified by Executive Order 13978, including individuals such as John Adams, Clara Barton, Orville and Wilbur Wright, Douglas MacArthur, Martin Luther King Jr., and Christa McAuliffe. Around 240 names were listed in total.
Artists, who were required to be U.S. citizens, had until July 1 to submit their applications.
Acting NEH Chairman Michael McDonald said in April: "NEH is pleased to collaborate with NEA to bring to fruition the vision of a National Garden of American Heroes. The garden will provide the public with an opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of how the lives and accomplishments of these individuals have shaped our history and culture."
Trump said in 2021: "The National Garden is America's answer to this reckless attempt to erase our heroes, values, and entire way of life. On its grounds, the devastation and discord of the moment will be overcome with abiding love of country and lasting patriotism. This is the American way. When the forces of anti-Americanism have sought to burn, tear down, and destroy, patriots have built, rebuilt, and lifted up. That is our history. America responded to the razing of the White House by building it back in the same place with unbroken resolve, to the murders of Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr., with a national temple and the Stone of Hope, and to the terrorism of 9/11 with a new Freedom Tower."
He added: "In keeping with this tradition, America is responding to the tragic toppling of monuments to our founding generation and the giants of our past by commencing a new national project for their restoration, veneration, and celebration."
Justin Shubow, president of the National Civic Art Society, told CNN: "No one wants an outdoor Madame Tussauds museum and it appears that the administration is taking the right steps to make sure that we get beautiful, inspiring works of art."
It is not yet clear where the garden will be built, or when construction will begin.
But the NEH said in April that the garden would be built ahead of the 250th anniversary of Independence Day in 2026.
Related Articles
Donald Trump Gets Polling Boost From HispanicsMan Sues Trump Admin To Keep 70 Million-Year-Old Tyrannosaurus SkullADL Slams Donald Trump for Saying 'Shylocks'
2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Washington Post
33 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Doonesbury Comic Strips by Garry Trudeau - July 17, 1990
........Trump on Jeffrey Epstein: "Somebody that nobody cares about."....Lara Loomer: "How come we can't talk about what a dumb lying bimbo Pam Blondi is?...How many more times is this woman going to get away with F-ing everything up before she is fired?"....Trump on Rosie O'Donnell: "She is a threat to humanity."....O'Donnell in response: "I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. I'm everything you fear: a loud woman, a queer woman, a mother who tells the truth, an American who got out of the country before you set it ablaze."....Trump on Elon Musk: "50% genius, 50% boy."....Steve Bannon: "Formerly known as Elon Musk, Elmo the not an American, you're a South we take enough time and prove the facts of that, you should be deported because it's a crime what you did -- among many."....Musk: "The fat, drunken slob called Bannon will go back to prison and this time for a long time. He has a lifetime of crime to pay for."....Tucker Carlson: "Why are my cities disgusting? I don't even want to go there. It smells like weed and halal food."....CA Gov. Gavin Newsom: "Kids running from tear gas, crying on the phone because their mother was just taken from the fields. Trump calls me 'Newscum' but he's the real scum."....Jonathan V. Last on Trump: "Reinventing ICE as the primary instrument of internal state power. ICE is more or less a national brute squad."...Ruth Ben-Ghiat on Trump: "Authoritarian leader cult is folding to his will."....CA Governor's press office on Stephen Miller: "This fascist cuck in DC continues his assault on democracy and the the Constitution hurt your feelings, Stephen. Cry harder."....Charlie Kirk on Texas flooding: "The death toll likely would not have been as high if it wasn't for DEI."....Dean Blundell on Trump: "An aging, increasingly incoherent, barely upright man."....Maureen Dowd: "Trump, who plays at being king, is not interested in virtue; only in humiliation, conflict, enrichment and revenge."....Tina Brown: "Out of Trump's ass, his ego, and his flawless media intuition, came: Let's bomb the shit out of Fordo."....John Cleese on Trump administration: "This is why dictatorships fail. Dictators always surround themselves with yes-people who are terrified to acquaint the dictator with reality."....Trump on Sen. Rand Paul: "His ideas are actually crazy (losers!). The people of Kentucky can't stand him."....VP JD Vance: "I empathize with Americans who are exhausted after 25 years of foreign entanglements in the Middle difference is that back then we had dumb presidents."....Andrew Sullivan: "A president who lies about everything all the time is singularly incapable of being a war president. People have to trust your word in a war. But Trump's word is toilet paper."....John Oliver on ICE agents: "These are criminal gangs,...bounty hunters making money for each body they manage to kidnap. They have quotas. You are their USA is sick."....WH Communications Director Steven Cheung: "The Nobel Peace Prize is illegitimate if President Trump -- the ultimate peace president -- is denied his rightful recognition of bringing harmony across the world."....Rep. MTG: "America is the greatest country in the world and I fight the nasty 'America Last' Democrats in Washington to keep it that way."....Trump on Democrats: "I hate them. I cannot stand them, because I really believe they hate our country."....Rep. Hakeem Jeffries on House passing Trump's BBB: "One big ugly is a crime scene."....Jonathan Alter: "Might as well tear down the Statue of LIberty and flush Emma Lazarus's poem down the toilet."....Garrison Keillor: "Every morning the news hits us like a baseball bat. How did this crook and clown achieve the White House so he could wage war on science, higher education, the Constitution, regulatory agencies, and the world economy, while redecorating the Oval Office to look like the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas?"....Trump supporter to reporter "We're not stupid. Donald Trump is a genius. That's what the J stands for.".... ........Trump on Jeffrey Epstein: "Somebody that nobody cares about."....Lara Loomer: "How come we can't talk about what a dumb lying bimbo Pam Blondi is?...How many more times is this woman going to get away with F-ing everything up before she is fired?"....Trump on Rosie O'Donnell: "She is a threat to humanity."....O'Donnell in response: "I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. I'm everything you fear: a loud woman, a queer woman, a mother who tells the truth, an American who got out of the country before you set it ablaze."....Trump on Elon Musk: "50% genius, 50% boy."....Steve Bannon: "Formerly known as Elon Musk, Elmo the not an American, you're a South we take enough time and prove the facts of that, you should be deported because it's a crime what you did -- among many."....Musk: "The fat, drunken slob called Bannon will go back to prison and this time for a long time. He has a lifetime of crime to pay for."....Tucker Carlson: "Why are my cities disgusting? I don't even want to go there. It smells like weed and halal food."....CA Gov. Gavin Newsom: "Kids running from tear gas, crying on the phone because their mother was just taken from the fields. Trump calls me 'Newscum' but he's the real scum."....Jonathan V. Last on Trump: "Reinventing ICE as the primary instrument of internal state power. ICE is more or less a national brute squad."...Ruth Ben-Ghiat on Trump: "Authoritarian leader cult is folding to his will."....CA Governor's press office on Stephen Miller: "This fascist cuck in DC continues his assault on democracy and the the Constitution hurt your feelings, Stephen. Cry harder."....Charlie Kirk on Texas flooding: "The death toll likely would not have been as high if it wasn't for DEI."....Dean Blundell on Trump: "An aging, increasingly incoherent, barely upright man."....Maureen Dowd: "Trump, who plays at being king, is not interested in virtue; only in humiliation, conflict, enrichment and revenge."....Tina Brown: "Out of Trump's ass, his ego, and his flawless media intuition, came: Let's bomb the shit out of Fordo."....John Cleese on Trump administration: "This is why dictatorships fail. Dictators always surround themselves with yes-people who are terrified to acquaint the dictator with reality."....Trump on Sen. Rand Paul: "His ideas are actually crazy (losers!). The people of Kentucky can't stand him."....VP JD Vance: "I empathize with Americans who are exhausted after 25 years of foreign entanglements in the Middle difference is that back then we had dumb presidents."....Andrew Sullivan: "A president who lies about everything all the time is singularly incapable of being a war president. People have to trust your word in a war. But Trump's word is toilet paper."....John Oliver on ICE agents: "These are criminal gangs,...bounty hunters making money for each body they manage to kidnap. They have quotas. You are their USA is sick."....WH Communications Director Steven Cheung: "The Nobel Peace Prize is illegitimate if President Trump -- the ultimate peace president -- is denied his rightful recognition of bringing harmony across the world."....Rep. MTG: "America is the greatest country in the world and I fight the nasty 'America Last' Democrats in Washington to keep it that way."....Trump on Democrats: "I hate them. I cannot stand them, because I really believe they hate our country."....Rep. Hakeem Jeffries on House passing Trump's BBB: "One big ugly is a crime scene."....Jonathan Alter: "Might as well tear down the Statue of LIberty and flush Emma Lazarus's poem down the toilet."....Garrison Keillor: "Every morning the news hits us like a baseball bat. How did this crook and clown achieve the White House so he could wage war on science, higher education, the Constitution, regulatory agencies, and the world economy, while redecorating the Oval Office to look like the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas?"....Trump supporter to reporter "We're not stupid. Donald Trump is a genius. That's what the J stands for.".... ........Trump on Jeffrey Epstein: "Somebody that nobody cares about."....Lara Loomer: "How come we can't talk about what a dumb lying bimbo Pam Blondi is?...How many more times is this woman going to get away with F-ing everything up before she is fired?"....Trump on Rosie O'Donnell: "She is a threat to humanity."....O'Donnell in response: "I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. I'm everything you fear: a loud woman, a queer woman, a mother who tells the truth, an American who got out of the country before you set it ablaze."....Trump on Elon Musk: "50% genius, 50% boy."....Steve Bannon: "Formerly known as Elon Musk, Elmo the not an American, you're a South we take enough time and prove the facts of that, you should be deported because it's a crime what you did -- among many."....Musk: "The fat, drunken slob called Bannon will go back to prison and this time for a long time. He has a lifetime of crime to pay for."....Tucker Carlson: "Why are my cities disgusting? I don't even want to go there. It smells like weed and halal food."....CA Gov. Gavin Newsom: "Kids running from tear gas, crying on the phone because their mother was just taken from the fields. Trump calls me 'Newscum' but he's the real scum."....Jonathan V. Last on Trump: "Reinventing ICE as the primary instrument of internal state power. ICE is more or less a national brute squad."...Ruth Ben-Ghiat on Trump: "Authoritarian leader cult is folding to his will."....CA Governor's press office on Stephen Miller: "This fascist cuck in DC continues his assault on democracy and the the Constitution hurt your feelings, Stephen. Cry harder."....Charlie Kirk on Texas flooding: "The death toll likely would not have been as high if it wasn't for DEI."....Dean Blundell on Trump: "An aging, increasingly incoherent, barely upright man."....Maureen Dowd: "Trump, who plays at being king, is not interested in virtue; only in humiliation, conflict, enrichment and revenge."....Tina Brown: "Out of Trump's ass, his ego, and his flawless media intuition, came: Let's bomb the shit out of Fordo."....John Cleese on Trump administration: "This is why dictatorships fail. Dictators always surround themselves with yes-people who are terrified to acquaint the dictator with reality."....Trump on Sen. Rand Paul: "His ideas are actually crazy (losers!). The people of Kentucky can't stand him."....VP JD Vance: "I empathize with Americans who are exhausted after 25 years of foreign entanglements in the Middle difference is that back then we had dumb presidents."....Andrew Sullivan: "A president who lies about everything all the time is singularly incapable of being a war president. People have to trust your word in a war. But Trump's word is toilet paper."....John Oliver on ICE agents: "These are criminal gangs,...bounty hunters making money for each body they manage to kidnap. They have quotas. You are their USA is sick."....WH Communications Director Steven Cheung: "The Nobel Peace Prize is illegitimate if President Trump -- the ultimate peace president -- is denied his rightful recognition of bringing harmony across the world."....Rep. MTG: "America is the greatest country in the world and I fight the nasty 'America Last' Democrats in Washington to keep it that way."....Trump on Democrats: "I hate them. I cannot stand them, because I really believe they hate our country."....Rep. Hakeem Jeffries on House passing Trump's BBB: "One big ugly is a crime scene."....Jonathan Alter: "Might as well tear down the Statue of LIberty and flush Emma Lazarus's poem down the toilet."....Garrison Keillor: "Every morning the news hits us like a baseball bat. How did this crook and clown achieve the White House so he could wage war on science, higher education, the Constitution, regulatory agencies, and the world economy, while redecorating the Oval Office to look like the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas?"....Trump supporter to reporter "We're not stupid. Donald Trump is a genius. That's what the J stands for."....
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
State of Crypto: The Industry's No Good, Very Bad Wait Actually Excellent Week
The "Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act," otherwise known as the GENIUS Act, is now the law of the land, after President Donald Trump signed the first major U.S. legislation following a week-long process to pass it and two other bills in the House of Representatives. You're reading State of Crypto, a CoinDesk newsletter looking at the intersection of cryptocurrency and government. Click here to sign up for future editions. On Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump signed a crypto bill into law. This is the first time a major cryptocurrency bill has become law, and it likely is not the last. For the first time, a major cryptocurrency bill has become law in the U.S. The GENIUS Act, which sets out to create a regulatory framework governing stablecoins, or cryptocurrencies pegged to another asset like the U.S. dollar, kickstarts a process that will see the Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and other regulators become far more involved in the crypto sector. There was a bit of a false start. The House Rules Committee met Monday evening to debate the bills with key members of the Financial Services and Agriculture Committees ahead of a procedural vote, which the House held Tuesday. That procedural vote was expected to sail through, albeit on party-line votes. It did not. Members of the House Freedom Caucus voted against the procedural motion to open debate and threw a wrench into the House's "Crypto Week." Later that evening, U.S. President Donald Trump posted on his social media platform Truth Social that 11 of the holdouts had agreed to vote for the motion and the House reconvened on Wednesday to first vote to hold a redo on the other vote (this one passed mostly along party lines) and then to actually redo the other vote. Many of the 11 holdouts continued to hold out. Trump, in remarks made before signing the GENIUS Act on Friday, joked about this: "I am so tired of making phone calls at 2, 3, 4 o'clock in the morning." Still, after a record-breaking 9+ hour vote, the lawmakers did finally vote in favor of the move to debate, clearing the way to a final vote for the three bills on Thursday. Despite these hiccups, Congressman Bryan Steil noted that Crypto Week largely played out as planned, with three bills getting passed and one heading to the president's desk. "In the House, it feels like in the home stretch with the narrow majority, there's final negotiations, final discussions," he said on CoinDesk TV Thursday ahead of the vote. "But the good news is the play call that was made at the start of the week is the play call we're executing today, which is passing GENIUS, putting that on the president's desk for his signature into law." Moreover, while industry participants anticipated that maybe 30 or so Democrats would vote for the bills, the actual numbers dramatically surpassed this — 78 Democrats joined 216 Republicans in voting for Clarity and 102 Democrats/206 Republicans voted for GENIUS. For context, last year's Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act (FIT21), Clarity's predecessor, saw 78 Democrats and 208 Republicans vote in favor. House Financial Services Committee Chairman French Hill, speaking at a press conference after Thursday's votes, was positively giddy at successfully shepherding the bills through in just a matter of months: "I knew that my target was to beat FIT21 and I made a bet with myself — and I won." Neither Clarity nor GENIUS are done yet. The next steps for GENIUS belong to the federal regulators tasked with implementing its provisions. The Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and others will now have to launch the rulemaking process to develop the actual regulations asked for in the law. Clarity's next steps are murkier. The Senate is clearly working on its own bill, at least at the moment — senators have introduced principles and are holding hearings. These actions suggest the Senate Banking and Agriculture Committees may do their own thing, rather than adopt Clarity as it is. Hill, in Thursday's press conference, made it clear he hoped the Senate would take Clarity up. And House Agriculture Committee Chair Glenn GT Thompson said on CoinDesk TV on Thursday morning that he had been working with his Senate counterparts as it launched its process. Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott previously set a Sept. 30 deadline for moving the Senate's market structure bill, which will govern a far broader swath of the industry. Read CoinDesk's coverage from Crypto Week: House Gears Up for Crypto Market Structure Vote on Wednesday, Stablecoins Thursday House's Crypto Markets Bill on Track, But Some in Industry Hope For Senate Overhaul 'Crypto Week' Back on Track? Trump Says Defecting Lawmakers Ready to Vote for Bills Senate Agriculture's Top Dem: Crypto Market Structure Effort Needs 'Serious Changes' 'Crypto Week' Is Stuck Again as House Procedural Vote Drags On 'Crypto Week' Back on Track After Lengthy House Do-Over Vote U.S. House's 'Crypto Week' Shifts Toward Getting All Legislation Out Thursday U.S. House Passes CLARITY Act, Moves on to Stablecoin Vote GENIUS Act for Stablecoins Passes House on Way to Being First Major U.S. Crypto Law 'Crypto Week' Reaction: What GENIUS and CLARITY Bills Mean for the Industry Trump to Sign the Historic GENIUS Act Into Law. What Does It Mean for Crypto? Trump Signs GENIUS Act Into Law, Elevating First Major Crypto Effort to Become Policy Tether CEO Says He'll Comply With GENIUS to Come to U.S., Circle Says It's Set Now Trump Signs GENIUS Act Into Law: The Full Transcript : The federal banking regulators published a statement addressing crypto custody. : The U.S. Department of Justice and Commodity Futures Trading Commission are dropping their investigations into whether Polymarket allowed U.S. traders access to its platform despite a consent decree Polymarket agreed to saying it wouldn't. : Brian Moynihan said the Bank of America does have plans to get into stablecoins and has already begun working on something. : Roger Ver is fighting his extradition to the U.S. to face tax evasion charges. Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm's criminal trial kicked off this week, with jury selection taking a day and a half and the overall trial now expected to run approximately three weeks. Storm was arrested in 2023 and charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering, conspiracy to violate sanctions and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business. So far prosecutors have only just begun making their case, beginning with a set of witnesses who say they were victims of Tornado Cash. Prosecutors will be making their case to a largely non-technical jury. Just one member works as an IT manager, while another works at Palantir. The rest have a range of jobs and educational backgrounds. There's also ongoing motions efforts separate from the trial itself, with defense attorneys moving to try and kick out some of the evidence prosecutors have suggested they'll introduce. Right to Code? Tornado Cash Dev Roman Storm's Money Laundering Trial Kicks Off Monday Jury Seated for Tornado Cash Dev Roman Storm's Trial Legitimate Privacy Tool or Dirty Money 'Laundromat'? Lawyers Debate Role of Tornado Cash on Day 1 of Roman Storm Trial Hack 'Victims' Say Tornado Cash Offered No Help in the Wake of Exploits: Day 2 of Roman Storm Trial Monday 20:00 UTC (4:00 p.m. ET) The House Rules Committee met to discuss the Clarity Act, GENIUS Act and Anti-CBDC Act and debate on whether there would be an amendment process prior to votes for these bills. Tuesday 19:00 UTC (3:00 p.m. ET) The Senate Agriculture Committee held its first hearing on digital commodities ahead of anticipated market structure legislation. Wednesday 13:00 UTC (9:00 a.m. ET) The House Ways and Means Committee met to discuss crypto tax issues. 14:15 UTC (10:15 a.m. ET) House Democrats led by Financial Services Ranking Member Maxine Waters held a press conference to reiterate their concerns with the various pieces of legislation. Thursday 19:45 UTC (3:45 p.m. ET) The House scheduled a vote for the crypto bills, though this time was moved up to 2:40 p.m. ET right before that revised time. Friday 18:30 UTC (2:30 p.m. ET) The White House held a signing ceremony for the GENIUS Act. () Tokens purporting to represent stocks may not actually track the prices of those underlying stocks that closely, the Journal reports. () Immigration and Customs Enforcement is using a powerful new facial recognition tool. () This is just a charming story about a massive marmot. Enjoy. If you've got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you'd like to share, feel free to email me at nik@ or find me on Bluesky @ You can also join the group conversation on Telegram. See ya'll next week!Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Most Americans think Trump megabill will benefit wealthy people: Survey
Nearly two-thirds of Americans think the 'big, beautiful bill' will do more to help wealthy people, according to a new AP-NORC poll. That includes 48 percent of Republicans, 60 percent of independents, and 83 percent of Democrats, according to the poll, which was released on Friday. The bill extends many of the tax cuts passed by Republicans in 2017 during President Trump's first term, alongside significant reductions to welfare services. Democrats have assailed the law as a historic transfer of wealth to the rich from the poor. Sixty-one percent of Americans also said the law would do more to hurt low-income people. However, the two parties were divided on the question of low-income Americans. Less than a third of Republicans said the bill would do more to harm low-income people, compared to 90 percent of Democrats. Democrats are hoping to use the bill's cuts to Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and other government support programs as key messaging during the upcoming 2026 midterms. The bill's effects on low-income Americans, however, could take several years to show. The bill's deepest funding cuts to Medicaid, which could result in millions losing their insurance in the next 10 years, will not kick in until 2028, although work requirements could begin by the end of 2026. Changes to SNAP will also not go into effect until 2028. The bill has also garnered criticism for its long-term additions to the national debt, estimated to be in the trillions. Many economists have expressed concerns about its cost at a time when government spending was already thought to be unsustainable in the long run. In the poll released Friday, approval of Trump's handling of government spending was down to 38 percent, compared to 46 percent from an AP-NORC poll in March. About two-thirds of Americans think the government is spending too much, with Republicans and Democrats in agreement, according to the poll. The poll surveyed 1,437 adults between July 10 and July 14, with a margin of error of 3.6 percentage points.