​ Trump Court Losses Mount: Name Off the Kennedy Center
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Trump Court Losses Pile Up as His Name Comes Down at the Kennedy Center

A run of rulings this week stripped Trump’s name from a Washington landmark, forced removed history back into the national parks, and froze his $1.8 billion payout fund.

poligirlsayswhat by poligirlsayswhat
June 13, 2026
in News, Politics
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Trump court losses stacked up fast this week, and the most visible one is unfolding in real time on the marble face of a Washington landmark. Early Saturday morning on June 13, 2026, crews climbed scaffolding at the Kennedy Center and began prying letters off the building, taking down the name Donald J. Trump after a federal judge ruled that only Congress, and not a board he reshaped, holds the power to rename the institution. The scene drew a crowd in the early hours, a few protest signs waving as workers picked at the wall and the city watched a piece of the second term come apart letter by letter.

U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper had set a Friday deadline for the name to come down, and the building blew right past it. The facade still read The Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts when midnight hit, so the center asked the court for more time until noon Saturday, blaming thunderstorms that rolled through the area and slowed the job. Just hours before that, an appeals panel rejected a final attempt to freeze Cooper’s order while the larger fight plays out. That panel included a Trump appointee, Gregory Katsas, sitting alongside two judges named by Barack Obama, and it offered no reasoning in its brief unsigned ruling. Cooper went further than the signage too. He blocked a planned two year shutdown of the venue for renovations that leadership wanted to launch in July, keeping the lights on at one of the most storied stages in the country.

The Trump court losses did not stop at the Kennedy Center. On Friday, June 12, U.S. District Judge Angel Kelley in Boston ordered the administration to put back the history and science it had stripped out of national parks across the country. The removals flowed from an executive order titled Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History and a parallel push from Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and a watchdog group called Save Our Signs counted at least 59 displays that had vanished or been altered. The targets read like a tour through the parts of the American story some people would rather not tell. Panels at the site of the President’s House in Philadelphia laid out the lives of nine enslaved people held there by George Washington. Roughly 80 markers stood along the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail in Alabama. Climate displays hung at Glacier National Park in Montana, and signs at the Grand Canyon acknowledged that settlers pushed Native tribes off their land. Kelley’s nationwide injunction forces every piece back into place in its original condition while the lawsuit, brought by Democracy Forward and the National Parks Conservation Association, moves ahead. The Interior Department has already appealed.

Another of the week’s Trump court losses landed in Virginia, where U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema indefinitely blocked a $1.8 billion payout fund the administration had floated to compensate people who claim they were victims of a so called weaponized federal government. Brinkema gave the Justice Department one week to file a sworn statement, signed by the acting attorney general and the Treasury secretary, swearing the fund will not move forward. Critics had already labeled it a slush fund, and part of the alarm was that the money could flow to people connected to the January 6 attack on the Capitol, a group Trump pardoned on his first day back in office. The fund traces back to a settlement tied to Trump’s own $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS, and Brinkema made clear she would not let the administration sidestep a ruling by simply claiming it had changed its mind. As she put it from the bench, the government should not be able to dodge review by temporarily altering its behavior.

What ties the Trump court losses together is the pattern, not any single headline. Judges appointed by both parties keep landing on the same side, and the rulings keep hitting the exact places where culture, memory, and power meet. The parks fight is not abstract for our readers. The signs ordered back into the ground speak to slavery, to civil rights, to the march from Selma, to the people whose history this country has spent generations trying to tell honestly. The same pressure has been circling the Smithsonian for more than a year. Earlier moves in 2025 and the start of 2026 trimmed the text beside Trump’s portrait at the National Portrait Gallery and pulled references to his two impeachments out of an exhibit at the National Museum of American History. Those museum changes were not ordered by any court, but they live in the same story, and the courthouse is now where much of that story is being decided.

For a man who spent the opening stretch of his second term insisting the courts were finally in his corner, this run of Trump court losses tells a different tale. The Supreme Court has handed the administration plenty of emergency wins, yet down in the district courts the record has been lopsided the other way for months, and this week sharpened the picture into something hard to spin. A name is coming off a building in the capital, history is going back up in the parks, and a fund he wanted is frozen until further notice. The appeals are already in motion, and some of these fights will climb all the way to the top, but as of this morning the rulings hold and the scaffolding is still up at the Kennedy Center.

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poligirlsayswhat

poligirlsayswhat

Grace McNair, known by her pen name poligirlsayswhat, is a political journalist and contributor for Baller Alert covering the intersection of politics, culture, and social impact. Her work focuses on breaking down complex policy, elections, and major headlines into clear, accessible insights that connect national decisions to everyday life. With a focus on accountability, media literacy, and the real-world impact of political power, she brings a culturally aware perspective to stories that shape public discourse, particularly within underrepresented communities. Her reporting and commentary center on transparency, truth, and the influence of government decisions on daily life. Following increased public attention and threats tied to her coverage of the administration, she has chosen to maintain a lower public profile while continuing her work. Despite this, her voice remains a consistent and trusted source of insight for readers seeking clarity in an increasingly complex political landscape.

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