Senate Republicans maintain their proposal would authorize security construction, but not Trumps ballroom. The White House disagrees.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/05/05/senate-budget-bill-trump-ballroom
Senate Republicans late Monday proposed $1 billion to pay for new White House security measures, with lawmakers and White House officials disagreeing over whether the legislation would cover President Donald Trumps planned ballroom.
The proposed legislative text says the money would be used for both aboveground and underground security features that the administration has declined to fully detail. The text explicitly says the money could not be used for non-security elements of the project, a reference to Trumps planned ballroom.....
White House officials said Tuesday that the legislation, if enacted, would authorize the entire project including the aboveground ballroom.
Congress has rightly recognized the need for these funds, White House spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement, citing the high-profile incident last month when a gunman stormed through the security checkpoint outside the White House correspondents dinner. The proposal would provide the United States Secret Service with the resources they need to fully and completely harden the White House complex, in addition to the many other critical missions for the USSS......
Trump has argued that the ballroom itself is a needed national security measure so he and future presidents can safely entertain VIP guests, a message increasingly echoed by his allies in Congress after last months incident. Justice Department officials last week asked Leon to dissolve his order blocking construction, citing the shooting at the correspondents dinner in a rambling legal filing that read like one of Trumps Truth Social posts.....
Democrats argued Tuesday that the proposal illustrates that Republicans are out of touch with voters needs, highlighting the broadly unpopular ballroom. Fifty-six percent of Americans oppose Trumps decision to tear down the White Houses East Wing to make way for his planned ballroom, funded by about $400 million in private donations, while 28 percent support the project, according to a Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll conducted last month.
trump will use the $1 billion for the entire project including the aboveground ballroom. There will be no funding by private donations.