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- Trump renamed the Kennedy Center to the Trump Kennedy Center in December 2025.
- A federal judge ordered Trump's name removed in May 2026, saying only Congress can rename the building.
- It was originally called the National Cultural Center and changed after Kennedy's assassination in 1963.
President Donald Trump's efforts to name the Kennedy Center after himself and close the performing arts space for renovations were blocked by a federal judge on Friday.
Since the Kennedy Center was created by Congress, changing its name requires congressional approval, the judge ruled.
In December 2025, the Center's Trump-appointed board voted to rename the Kennedy Center to the Trump Kennedy Center, reflecting the president's broader effort to exert influence over Washington's cultural institutions. It happened despite lingering questions about its legality. The new signage read "The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts."
Originally established by Congress in 1958 as an "artistic mecca" for the performing arts in the nation's capital, the National Cultural Center was officially renamed in memory of President John F. Kennedy after his assassination in 1963.
Since its opening in 1971, the center has hosted the Kennedy Center Honors and a range of events and exhibits across genres.
Here's a brief overview of how the Center came to be and its changes under Trump's leadership so far.