Independent: Trump welcomes guests to ‘Rose Garden club’ after revamp to make iconic White House location more like Mar-a-Lago

Trump hosted a dinner for allies in Congress and spoke at length about the changes he’s made to the iconic White House garden

President Donald Trump welcomed guests Friday evening to the “Rose Garden Club” – the iconic White House outdoor space that now appears strangely reminiscent of another exclusive location.

The new Rose Garden features a limestone patio with country club-style chairs, tables, and striped umbrellas – echoing Trump’s private Palm Beach club, Mar-a-Lago.

Trump hosted a dinner for allies in Congress and spoke about some of the changes he’s made to the iconic White House garden since taking office in January.

“You’re the first ones in this great place,” the president said. “We call it the Rose Garden Club and it’s a club for senators, for congresspeople, and for people in Washington, and frankly, people that can bring peace and success to our country.”

Long gone is the central grassy area that Trump claimed was prone to getting muddy and is now replaced with tiles. But flowers remain along the border.

Friday evening’s setup featured four rows of six tables with white tablecloths draped across each one. The white chairs featured bright yellow seat cushions, in the same color scheme as the umbrellas.

Each table was outfitted with a classic country club-style place setting and included a basket of rolls and a saucer with pats of butter.

White House Communications Director Stephen Cheung posted a photo on X, giving a closer look at the individual table settings. Each person appeared to receive a gold-embossed welcome paper that read “The Rose Garden Club.”

“We picked a great stone,” Trump told the audience, referencing the limestone flooring. “And we have a great speaker system.”

The president recently installed a new speaker system in the Rose Garden which he showed off to reporters last month.

Trump has received criticism for making dramatic changes to the historic Rose Garden, which was established in 1913 by former first lady Ellen Louise Wilson, wife of former president Woodrow Wilson, and renovated during former president John F. Kennedy’s administration.

The president reportedly wanted to “recreate” the patio experience at his Mar-a-Lago club to host guests and entertain people, the New York Times reported earlier this year.

Before returning to the White House, Trump often spent evening downtime sitting on the patio at Mar-a-Lago with fellow club members, the Times reported. The president enjoyed sitting back and controlling the club’s playlist from an iPad, the report said, a tech set-up he has now recreated at his Washington abode.

But the Rose Garden revamp is just one of various aesthetic projects the president has embarked upon at the White House.

The Oval Office now features a plethora of gilded accents, from the ceiling’s crown molding to the side table lamps. Every detail has seemingly been turned to the yellow-gold – even the fireplace screen.

The portraits of famous Americans hanging in the Oval Office have had their frames swapped from wood to intricate gilded ones.

Each president has control over the decor of the Oval Office. They’re allowed to switch out the rug, curtains, couches, and even the desk. Pictures and accolades are put on display to show off a president’s accomplishments.

Trump has also made small changes elsewhere – he added two 88-foot American Flag poles to the White and South lawns of the White House and moved prominent portraits of former presidents to a hidden stairwell.

More changes are coming. The president said he would add a lavish $200 million ballroom to the White House to serve as a place to host state dinners and other events.

How much are the memberships? Are any Epstein girls included?

https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-white-house-rose-garden-makeover-b2821513.html

Newsweek: Donald Trump fumes at Rose Garden work, yells, “Who did this?”

President Donald Trump has published footage he said showed a “stupid” subcontractor damaging limestone in the White House’s newly reworked Rose Garden.

Why It Matters

Trump has remolded chunks of the White House to his taste since returning to office at the start of the year, decking out the Oval Office and announcing the construction of a new ballroom to the tune of $200 million.

Work finished on paving over the previously grassy lawn of the Rose Garden in recent weeks, and Trump was spotted surveying the progress of renovation work on the space from the White House roof as he shouted down to talk with journalists earlier this month.

Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham in March that the grass area “doesn’t work” for press conferences, but “gorgeous stone” would work better for one of the White House’s most iconic spots.

What To Know

Trump said on Saturday said he had noticed “a huge gash in the limestone” stretching more than 25 yards three days earlier while “admiring the stonework.”

“It was deep and nasty! I started yelling, ‘Who did this, and I want to find out now!’ —And I didn’t say this in a nice manner,” Trump said in a post to his Truth Social platform.

The president said security cameras had captured footage of a subcontractor using a broken steel cart that was “rubbing hard against the soft, beautiful stone.”

“We caught them, cold,” Trump said, adding he would replace the broken stone, charge the contractor for the damage and bar the construction worker from the White House.

The Rose Garden stretches back to Ellen Wilson, the wife of Woodrow Wilson, but was overhauled under President John F. Kennedy while he and his wife, Jackie Kennedy, resided in the White House. The roses that gave the space its name remain.

“I think that both Kennedys would be startled, and not in a good way, since they were apparently grass lovers and it is such a dramatic change,” Professor Katherine Jellison, a historian at Ohio University, told British newspaper The Telegraph.

Trump said he had opted for “the most beautiful marble and stone available anywhere” for the paving over of the Rose Garden.

The new design has for months drawn overt comparisons to Trump’s Florida gold club and resort, Mar-a-Lago. White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said the yellow umbrellas on the Rose Garden patio were bought from the same vendor that provided those for Mar-a-Lago.

What People Are Saying

President Donald Trump said on Truth Social on Saturday: “The Rose Garden is completed, and far more beautiful than anyone ever had in mind when it was conceived of, decades ago.”

What Happens Next

It is not clear how quickly the crack in the stone will be repaired.

Things like that happen when a dumb-assed megalomaniac orders walkways & driveways constructed out of soft porous rock such as limestone. Suck it up & own it, Bubba!

https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-rose-garden-renovation-patio-limestone-cracked-2122289