Donald Trump had already decided to pave the Rose Garden. And add gold finishes to just about everything in the Oval Office. And install a needlessly large flagpole. And rip apart the Lincoln bedroom’s bathroom.
But when the president approved the destruction of the East Wing’s facade, despite earlier promises that his ballroom project wouldn’t “interfere” with the existing mansion, it took the Republican’s campaign to remake the White House to a breathtaking new level.
As the controversy surrounding the demolition project was growing, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News that she believed the outrage to be “fake,” because nearly every president has made “modernizations and renovations” during his tenure. But we’re not just talking about modest alterations. Rather, in this instance, we’re talking about bulldozers.
While the news on Monday afternoon indicated that crews had torn down the entrance way to the White House’s East Wing, it became clear a day later that the facade wasn’t the only part of the structure affected. The Washington Post reported:
A demolition job that began Monday with the disappearance of the White House’s eastern entrance advanced Tuesday with the destruction of much of the East Wing, according to a photograph obtained by The Washington Post and two people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the scene.
By Tuesday afternoon, it appeared obvious that a significant portion of the East Wing has been demolished, Trump’s earlier vows notwithstanding.
NEW: After The Washington Post reported Monday on the demolition of the "East Wing facade," a new picture obtained by Law Dork that was taken on Tuesday shows that a substantial portion of the entirety of the East Wing has been demolished.
— Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner.bsky.social) 2025-10-21T20:13:32.290Z
As images of the destruction circulated, Reuters reported that White House officials had agreed to “submit plans” for Trump’s project “to a body that oversees federal building construction.”
The report was oddly comedic, in a macabre sort of way: In 2025, a president and his team decide to bring in bulldozers to demolish much of the East Wing first, and then submit plans to the National Capital Planning Commission for a formal review.








