Trump Cut Funds From Wasteful Projects To Spend on Wasteful Statue Garden
Even when the administration has cut from seemingly obvious sources, Trump has redirected federal spending toward sources closer to his heart.

President Donald Trump has pledged to cut government waste, but hasn't delivered much on that front so far. Even when his administration has cut from seemingly obvious sources—for example, federal funding for arts and humanities—Trump has simply redirected federal spending toward sources closer to his heart.
During his first term, Trump signed executive orders calling for the creation of the National Garden of American Heroes, which was to contain 250 statues of "historically significant Americans…who have contributed positively to America throughout our history." In April, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) began taking applications from sculptors. The plan is for the garden to open on July 4, 2026—the 250th anniversary of American independence.
That's a rather ambitious turnaround time. "America doesn't have enough quality sculptors or museum-caliber foundries to make this happen on Trump's speedy timeline," Politico's Michael Schaffer wrote this week. "Many U.S. fine-art foundries are booked anywhere from six to 18 months in advance. There also aren't many of them." As a result, "faster production often involves partnering with Chinese or other foreign facilities."
There is also, as yet, no site chosen for the garden (though South Dakota Republican Gov. Larry Rhoden recommended a plot of land near Mount Rushmore, which its owner offered to donate).
Trump has very exacting standards, dictating that "all statues must be life-size and made of marble, granite, bronze, copper, or brass," and "lifelike or realistic representations of the persons they depict, not abstract or modernist representations."
"The biggest collection of artisans and fabricators working in Trump's preferred old-school realist style turns out to be in China, not the U.S.," Schaffer wrote.
The list of figures to be honored ranges from historical heroes to entertainers and seemingly everyone in between. More to the point, the garden would involve a large expenditure of taxpayer funds.
"The National Endowment for the Humanities has canceled most of its grant programs and started putting staff on administrative leave," Jennifer Schuessler of the The New York Times reported in April. "[Acting NEH Chairman Michael] McDonald told senior leadership that upward of 85 percent of the agency's hundreds of current grants were to be canceled."
But even while making those cuts, the administration is shelling out for the statue garden: Schuessler later reported that the NEH and the National Endowment for the Arts would collectively contribute $34 million to the project.
The NEH application says artists will receive up to $200,000 per commissioned statue and they are expected to start working on October 1. But even apart from the issues with foundry capacity, artists are unlikely to be able to create quality life-size statues on that budget and in that time frame.
Last year, the U.S. Capitol added a seven-foot bronze statue of the evangelist Billy Graham to its halls. The North Carolina state government commissioned the figure in 2020, and it took four years to complete, at a cost of $650,000. Trump's order is now calling for hundreds of artists to design, sculpt, and smelt hundreds of similar sculptures, at one-third the cost and on a much shorter timeline.
The statute of Graham—who is listed for inclusion in Trump's garden—is also instructive: There is already a place within the U.S. Capitol for displaying statues of honored Americans, as each state submits two statues for display in the National Statuary Hall. And the statue of Graham cost taxpayers nothing, as the construction was funded entirely by donations to the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, with no direct state funding whatsoever.
This should offer lessons for Trump's National Garden of American Heroes. If somebody wants to donate land, they're free to do so; if others want statues of certain historical Americans included, they're welcome to give money to the cause. But there's no reason the federal government has to play a role.
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Not enough money to put a dent in the budget. Don’t bother.
But his F-47 makes much more than a dent. It will be a bigger boondoggle than the F-35 was.
Besides there already is a place with sculptures of great Americans. I live near it. Duplicating something that already exists is indeed waste.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall_of_Fame_for_Great_Americans
Joe that’s peanuts and you are dishonest. So EG what is the cost of national debt per day : $6.4 billion per day.
You could turn some of our smaller states into a garden for the cost of that in a year
Interest expense on the public debt was approximately $678 billion in FY 2023
And the people while waiting for Moses to return from the mountain, they turned to each other and said, ” Let us build a statue from earthen clay and metal. ” And they made a golden bull and did worship it, making burnt offerings and other sacrifices. They did engage in revelry and drunkenness. And the Lord said to Moses, “The people have become corrupt.”
Lol.
Trump doesn’t drink which is why I’ll never be able to trust him completely.
Re: Picture at the top of this article
“I can’t define obscenity, but I know it when I see it!”
That’s a rather ambitious turnaround time. “America doesn’t have enough quality sculptors or museum-caliber foundries to make this happen on Trump’s speedy timeline,” Politico’s Michael Schaffer wrote this week. “Many U.S. fine-art foundries are booked anywhere from six to 18 months in advance. There also aren’t many of them.” As a result, “faster production often involves partnering with Chinese or other foreign facilities.”
Now I’ll pay extra if there’s a statue of Schaffer on all fours with a scrub brush in his ass to clean my boots. “Can’t get ‘fine-art foundries’ to do the work. Fuck the maker movement and all the indie artists that I would otherwise jizz myself over, we’ll have to go to China.”
What a stupid douchebag.
Seems to be no lack of sculptors cranking out statutes of obese black women. And there are hundreds of confederate statutes sitting in warehouses in the south. Couldn’t they be repurposed? Why do I have to figure this shit out? Seems obvious to me.
You saw the 70 ft. hot dog mounted on a pneumatic platform that raised and ‘exploded’ every hour because patriarchy and beef consumption-something, something too, right? Saw the portal to Ireland that had to be taken down and/or policed because, initially, people were flashing each other and then, “models” began “advertising” with it, right?
Not only that, obviously, we couldn’t possibly work out some quid pro quo for a von Steuben, Pulaski, or Lafayette statue. Nobody would be willing to make a couple President statues to have their Crispus Attucks statue displayed. Nope, China is the only place to get statues of any type made and if you can’t get the finest US-made statues, you might as well go for the (stupidly contrived) cheapest, CCP-funding bullshit.
FFS, Paul Revere, with no formal training made over 400 cannons, church bells, and mortars with his family, effectively out of his home in the 30 yrs. after the war. Many of them are still functional to this day. The idea that, in 2025, nobody who isn’t the most artisan of artisans or Chinese could make a statue is just stupid.
Now I’ll pay extra if there’s a statue of Schaffer on all fours with a scrub brush in his ass to clean my boots.
I will donate to that cause.
You never complain when Democrats waste money you hypocrite. That means you can’t talk about Trump and makes whatever he does ok.
Zzzzzz.
So I guess maybe only a singular personality like Trump could make some of the good things he’s done happen in the present political climate. But I’d hope not. It’s kind of depressing to think that the only viable choices for president were narcissistic weirdo and retard.
Crazed antisemite burns Jews
Reason – “Trump wastes money on statue garden”
It’s not a good look when Breitbart is a more accurate mirror to the happenings of the world. Is Reason just an academic journal on free trade and immigration now?
Reason is not news media. It is a legal and political think tank.
MollyGodiva.
Is.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
That explains the links to news stories every morning.
When is Trump going to nationalize tiktok Lancaster? Fucking putz.
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Fuck off and die, TDS addled slimy pile of shit.
As a resident of the Bronx, NY, I would point out that my borough has been home to something very much like this for over a century: the Hall of Fame for Great Americans. Located on what was once the uptown campus of New York University (NYU) and is now Bronx Community College, it was the original Hall of Fame in the U.S. It consists of busts (not full-size statues) of dozens of Americans from various fields of endeavor, with a plaque beneath each one explaining who he or she was, and what the person accomplished. It used to be much better known, as evidenced by the line “You will be a bust in the Hall of Fame!” in the movie The Wizard of Oz, which clearly references it. Today, it sits forlorn, as only people with college IDs can readily get to it. It briefly made news a decade or so ago when Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and “Stonewall” Jackson were removed from the hall, but that is probably the last time most people heard about it.
Thanks! I am also a Bronx resident. My wife practices medicine 1/4 mile away. It was good that they removed the busts of two people who committed treason. But nobody has been selected for the Hall in almost 50 years and the last four selectees never had their sculptures added: Clara Barton, Louis Brandeis, Luther Burbank, and Andrew Carnegie. Almost nobody visits the Hall; when my family visited it one Saturday several years ago we were the only visitors there.
If your wife is a medical professional, what was her rationale for marrying a gibbering retard? I’m genuinely curious.
Progressive cities like Boston have long enriched culture by mandating 1% of new public transit budgets be devoted to public art.
Since California has spent tens of billions on transit lines so far without rails or stations, the interest on its art funding should easily cover heroic hood ornaments for every Amtrak locomotive in the nation, bringing the public the art it deserves
Should a society devote any money whatsoever to memorialize and celebrate its own history, culture, and notable figures?
Like, monuments. Or museums. Museums often receive a lot of public funding. Notably, the Smithsonian (and the National Gallery of Art). If you’re against a statue garden are you similarly against these places where we go to wonder in awe at that which paved the way for where we are today?
Trump will spend millions to memorialize himself But in any case there is already a National Sculpture Garden in Washington, part of the National Gallery of Art, and the Hall of Fame for Great Americans, in New York City. The latter has had basically no funding for almost 50 years and gets almost no visitors.
You didn’t answer the question.
He’s too stupid to answer the question.
Society? Sure, absolutely. The federal government? Maybe when we’re not borrowing the money to spend on things like that.
Should we cancel the Independence Day fireworks display at the National Mall too? That’s federally funded. It would mean no celebration at all – because it’s not like we can have a bunch of randos lighting off explosives within arms reach of the White House.
Does America not deserve to celebrate her heritage and history because omg the debt?
Sorry rainbow crosswalk crowd, your opinions are neither requested nor accepted. Feel free to go on hunger strike (most of you really need the diet) or maybe move somewhere that’s more appreciative of your causes, like Gaza.
Look I’m all for blowing money on fine art while were broke, makes perfect sense. But why is Woody Guthrie, known Communist, being honored in a garden of American Heroes? Oh wait, bankrupting nations is what Communist do, now it actual makes perfect sense.
Yeah, they should do Arlo instead. WIth private donations.