On Politics: Trump’s house
The demolition of the East Wing has struck a nerve in Washington and beyond.
On Politics
October 22, 2025

Trump’s Washington

How President Trump is changing government, the country and its politics.

Good evening. The East Wing is being demolished. The U.S. Congress seems to be shrinking. And the polls in the New Jersey governor’s race are tightening. We’ll cover all that tonight, starting with the headlines.

An excavator, right, reaches toward the East Wing of the White House and claws down part of the structure, which is in a state of near destruction during the demolition.
Demolition this week at the White House. Alex Kent for The New York Times

The White House wrecking ball

It was breezy, bright and autumnal today in Washington — the perfect backdrop for a stroll to the White House to watch the swift demolition of the East Wing.

I heard it before I saw it: the thrum of construction equipment and a loud rat-tat-tat that could have been digging or drilling. As I weaved through a group of schoolchildren posing for photographs in front of the main residence, I could see the arms of two excavators bobbing around, too tall to be obscured by the thick white fence erected around the fresh construction site. Behind them, a cloud of dust obscured the clear air.

It wasn’t so long ago that Trump was promising his plan to build a 90,000-square-foot ballroom on the grounds “won’t interfere with the current building.” In fact, my colleague Luke Broadwater reported today that the entire wing, which is historically the domain of the first lady, will be razed in the project.

Images of the demolition, which began on Monday as a precursor to the construction of a $200 million ballroom, have rocketed around the globe, swiftly becoming political fodder and a perfect Rorschach test for a deeply polarizing presidency.

“This is Trump’s presidency in a single photo,” wrote Senator Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat, on X, above a picture showing roof tiles and windowpanes cascading from the facade of the wing, having fallen victim to the excavators’ jaws. “Illegal, destructive, and not helping you.”

The project has left historians and architects deeply alarmed. The National Trust for Historic Preservation on Wednesday urged officials to pause until it could go through the “legally required public review process.” Last week, Trump seemed to suggest to donors that “no approvals” were required for the project.

Trump’s allies insist that the images show a president shaking up Washington, just like he promised. In a sign of awareness that they could not entirely ignore the criticism of the project, though, administration officials called the uproar “manufactured outrage” in a release that detailed other renovations on the building over the years.

“He’s the builder-in-chief,” the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said brightly on Fox News on Tuesday. “In large part, he was re-elected back to this People’s House because he is good at building things.”

Leave it better than you found it?

Trump, ever the developer, has certainly spent a lot of time building things at the White House. He paved over the lawn in the Rose Garden to create a patio. He has added gold filigree to the Oval Office and ornate chandeliers to the Cabinet Room, remaking the White House with an indelible imprint of Mar-a-Lago maximalism that is all but certain to outlast his presidency.

An image of the White House showing the five areas that Trump is changing.
Marco Hernandez/The New York Times

“Thank you for having us at your home,” John Thune, the Republican Senate majority leader, told Trump on Tuesday, even though the White House does not actually belong to him, while thanking him “for everything you’re doing to make this such a beautiful place.”

Trump is also, arguably, pretty good at tearing things down, like longstanding alliances — something the secretary general of NATO sought to bolster on Wednesday in Washington — or the guardrails intended to hem in his impulses as he seeks revenge on his enemies.

“He seems to be upending all the norms that are associated with the presidency,” Matt Smith, a tourist from Lexington, N.C., observed this afternoon after riding up to the White House on a Lime scooter. Smith, an independent voter who did not back Trump, had hoped to spend his trip to Washington visiting Smithsonian art museums; with those museums closed by the government shutdown, he settled for this particular spectacle instead.

“This is him physically doing it to us,” Smith said, “just to show that he can.”

When busted norms collide

White House officials have repeatedly said that the ballroom will be paid for privately; Trump last week hosted a private dinner for donors who may see a donation to the project as a way to curry favor with the president.

But yesterday, one busted norm seemed to collide with another as Trump suggested that he might use funds from a settlement with his own government to pay for the ballroom.

After my colleague Devlin Barrett reported that Trump is demanding the Justice Department pay him $230 million to compensate him for the federal investigations into him — a situation with no parallel in American history in which the officials reviewing Trump’s claims are his own allies — Trump said he might use those funds to pay for his ballroom.

“If I get money from our country, I’ll do something nice with it, like give it to charity or give it to the White House while we restore the White House,” he said. “We’re doing a great job with the White House. As you know the ballroom is under construction.”

The source of such compensation would typically be taxpayer dollars.

Lisa Murkowski stands while being asked questions from reporters, who are not pictured but whose phones are being held out to record the senator’s replies.
Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

QUOTE OF THE DAY


The Congress is adrift. It’s like we have given up. And that’s not a good signal to the American public.”

Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, on how Congress has ceded its relevance as the government shutdown drags on and President Trump flexes his power. By almost any measure, writes our chief Washington correspondent, Carl Hulse, Congress is failing — and flailing.

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The Times offers several ways to send important information confidentially.

BY THE NUMBERS

Two side-by-side photos of the candidates for New Jersey governor. Jack Ciattarelli, left, wearing a navy suit and tie, and Mikie Sherrill, right, wearing jacket and shirt in a brighter shade of blue.
Jack Ciattarelli has gained some ground against Mikie Sherrill in the New Jersey governor’s race, according to polls. New York Times photographs by Rachel Wisniewski and Bryan Anselm

5 points

That’s the margin in the New Jersey governor’s race, as polls tighten in the final stretch before Election Day. Ruth Igielnik, The Times’s polling editor, explains.

Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic candidate, now holds a slim lead in the race for governor of New Jersey, with 50 percent of likely voters saying they plan to support her while 45 percent say they support her Republican opponent, Jack Ciattarelli, according to the latest Fox News poll taken Oct. 10 to 14.

That is tighter than the race was just a month ago, when Sherrill held a more comfortable 8 percentage point lead. Democrats have won the last two governors’ races in the state as well as every presidential election there since 1988, but Republicans are hoping to telegraph strength with an off-year victory in the race.

Of concern for Democrats, Ciattarelli has gained ground with independent voters and now has the edge with the group — 48 percent to 42 percent — in the latest Quinnipiac poll. That is a reversal from a month ago when Sherrill was up slightly with independent voters.

The remains of a destroyed home after a tornado. Three people in the foreground are looking at the destruction.
The aftermath of a tornado this march in Plantersville, Ala. Anna Watts for The New York Times

ONE LAST THING

A costly six months for weather disasters

President Trump is dismantling climate policies and moving to shift the burden of natural disaster relief and recovery from the federal government to the states.

But a group of climate researchers found that the first six months of 2025 were the most expensive start to any year on record, in terms of disaster damage, according to a tally they began after the administration stopped updating the federal database that usually records weather disasters and their costs.

My colleague Scott Dance reported that this year’s weather catastrophes have already racked up more than $100 billion in damages, mostly stemming from the wildfires that spread through Los Angeles in January.

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Taylor Robinson and Ama Sarpomaa contributed to this newsletter.

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