Great civilizations are remembered not by the speeches their leaders gave, but by what they left standing. The Romans built the Colosseum. The French gave us the Arc de Triomphe. For two and a half centuries, America has filled its capital with monuments worthy of the republic — the soaring obelisk of the Washington Monument, the quiet grandeur of the Lincoln Memorial. But Washington, D.C. has been overdue for something new, something bold, something that tells the world a quarter-millennium of freedom is worth celebrating in stone.
President Trump has spent months reshaping the nation’s capital. The beautification projects, the landscaping, the $400 million White House ballroom rising from the ground — even some Democrats have had to tip their hats to the transformation (yes, really). But all of that has been prologue to his most ambitious vision yet.
And on Thursday, that vision cleared a major hurdle.
A monument fit for 250 years
The National Capital Planning Commission voted to grant preliminary approval for Trump’s planned 250-foot triumphal arch near the Virginia end of the Memorial Bridge. The vote wasn’t close — eight commissioners in favor, one opposed, three voting present. The Commission of Fine Arts had already approved the design back in May. This project is moving, and it’s moving fast.
From the Associated Press:
“The National Capital Planning Commission voted, despite overwhelming public opposition, to approve preliminary site and building plans for the 250-foot arch the Republican president wants to build on a traffic circle at the Virginia end of the Memorial Bridge from Washington. Staff had recommended in its report on the project that the commission grant preliminary approval and request a series of changes so the arch would comply with the Height of Buildings Act.”
Commission chairman Will Scharf — who also serves as White House staff secretary — called the arch “a fitting commemoration of 250 years.” He noted that the Interior Department provided a “compelling argument” that the Height of Buildings Act doesn’t bind the federal government, and deferred that legal question to the next meeting in September, when a final approval vote could come. In other words, the bureaucratic objections are running out of runway.
The arch would stand more than twice as tall as the Lincoln Memorial and rival the great arches of Europe. Trump himself put it plainly back in April: it would be “the GREATEST and MOST BEAUTIFUL Triumphal Arch, anywhere in the World.”
Liberals discover they hate monuments now
I have to admit, I didn’t have “liberals oppose celebrating America’s birthday” on my bingo card this year, but here we are. Opponents have complained about disrupted sightlines between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery. A group of veterans and a historian filed a lawsuit to block construction.
And yet — no court has issued an injunction. The approvals keep coming. The opposition keeps losing.
This is the pattern, isn’t it? Trump proposes something — anything — and the institutional left reflexively opposes it. Not on principle. Not after careful deliberation. Just because his name is attached. Honestly, if Donald Trump came out tomorrow and endorsed breathing, half of Washington would suffocate on the spot out of pure spite.
Let me get this straight — we’re talking about a monument to America’s 250th birthday, and the best argument against it is that it might partially block a view? The Lincoln Memorial isn’t going anywhere. Arlington isn’t going anywhere. But a nation that stops building monuments to its own greatness is a nation that has stopped believing it deserves them.
Built to last
The final approval vote is expected in September. No court has blocked it. Two federal commissions have now blessed it. The critics can write all the angry op-eds they want.
Two hundred and fifty years ago, a band of revolutionaries decided to build something that had never existed before — a nation founded on liberty. It’s only fitting that the president marking that anniversary is one who actually builds things.
The arch will rise. And long after the outrage cycles fade, Americans will still be looking up at it.
Key Takeaways
- Trump’s 250-foot triumphal arch won preliminary approval from a key federal commission, 8-1.
- Liberal opposition — including a federal lawsuit — has failed to slow the project down.
- The arch will honor America’s 250th anniversary as a permanent monument to national greatness.
- Final approval could come as early as September, with no court blocking construction.