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  • The Week’s Saturday Wrap
    Reflecting Pool woes, a partisan takeover of America’s 250th birthday, and Kimmel’s proud nepotism

     
    controversy of the week

    Going green: Trump’s botched Reflecting Pool makeover

    “Good news,” said Rex Huppke in USA Today. “Donald Trump finally has a swamp to drain.” After “President I’m-A-Builder” splashed $14 million on beautifying the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool for the nation’s 250th birthday, the Washington landmark now resembles a “fetid 300,000-square foot bog.” Green algae has taken over the pool and defied attempts by Interior Department workers to kill it with hydrogen peroxide, which has succeeded only in peeling Trump’s handpicked “American flag blue” sealant off the pool’s floor. The chemicals might also explain the dead ducks spotted floating in a pool that is now a perfect “metaphor” for Trump’s incompetence. Trump claimed without evidence on social media that “Radical Left Lunatics” had vandalized the pool, said Rachel Kahn in The New Republic, and police have duly arrested a half-dozen people who dared pluck pieces of sealant from its murk. But the more likely culprits are the companies Trump hired — on no-bid contracts — for the renovation. These include the aptly named Greenwater Services, owned by Trump’s friend and donor John J. Cafaro, who both looks like he was “plucked right out of a cartoon” about sleazy businessmen and is one, with a felony conviction for bribery. Fences have now been erected around the pool, and hope is fading that it will reopen by July 4. 

    This was all so predictable, said Sarah Kaplan in The Washington Post. The pool was refilled in early June with 6.5 million gallons of nutrient-loaded water from the Tidal Basin. The warm, sunny days that followed provided ideal conditions for the photosynthetic algae to multiply. And the high temperatures may have been exacerbated by the pool’s new dark blue coating, “which absorbs more heat than its previous gray finish.” The pool has been algae-prone since its construction in 1923, said Nicole Russell in USA Today. President Barack Obama spent $34 million trying and failing to stop the blooms, but I don’t remember the media subjecting him to the same “criticism, mockery, and disdain” it has hurled at Trump.

    That’s because the Reflecting Pool reflects Trump’s hubris, said Hayes Brown in MS.now. Whether he’s renovating a pool or waging war on Iran, the script never varies. He boasts he can “easily” solve some problem that bedeviled his “stupid” predecessors. He enlists donors, relatives, or Fox News hosts to manage the details and, when the project collapses, blames scapegoats and declares victory anyway. (Trump “has fixed the Reflecting Pool for good,” a spokesperson gushed last week.) He often “starts with a glimmer of truth,” said Maureen Dowd in The New York Times; the Reflecting Pool did need sprucing up. But Trump always “goes overboard,” egged on by sycophants and his own misplaced selfbelief, and “ends up making things worse.” 

    Yet he endures, said Michael Tomasky in The New Republic. While we chuckle at the corruption behind the pool debacle, let’s reflect that “this is roughly the 10,362nd matter that, in any other administration, would be a huge scandal.” That’s why we’re obsessed, said Jonathan V. Last in The Bulwark. Poolgate lets us pretend “that we’re back in normal, scandalous territory,” where corrupt politicians arrange eight-figure paydays for their cigar-chomping pals. But it’s “a lie.” For every algae-choked pool, there’s an attempted coup, an American citizen shot dead by ICE, or some other “mortal sin” to remind us that “we are past the era of scandal” and “at a point, far out there, where the structures are failing.”

     
     
    VIEWPOINT

    Trump has severed America’s closest alliances

    “The United States under Trump now has, or will soon have, no very close allies left. For most of my life, Canada, Great Britain, and Israel each had ‘special relationships’ of various sorts with Washington; upon being re-elected, the White House immediately set about destroying the first, is hard at work on destroying the second, and seems increasingly willing to risk the third if Iran’s hostage takers demand it. How does a strongman behave once the entire world, save for about a third of his own country, loses all confidence in him? We’re going to spend the next two and a half years finding out. But probably not well.” 

    Nick Catoggio in The Dispatch

     
     
    briefing

    America’s contentious birthday

    President Trump has taken personal control of the nation’s 250th, turning it into a partisan celebration.

    What festivities are planned?
    The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence is being celebrated with a series of MAGA-fied gatherings, concerts, and competitions. Many of them have an overtly partisan component. The first event was a night of Ultimate Fighting Championship bouts staged on the White House lawn specifically to coincide with Trump’s 80th birthday. The next, the “Great American State Fair,” which runs on the National Mall for two weeks, was supposed to include stands from every U.S. state and territory. But at least seven states (six of them with Democratic governors) pulled out, citing costs and politics, after it became clear that the event would feature Republican themes like Make America Healthy Again Monday and the participation of conservative groups such as Moms for America. This event is “a more partisan affair than originally presented,” said Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek through a spokesman. The pro-Trump vibe also caused the cancellation of a planned June 25 kickoff concert, after country singer Martina McBride, rapper Young MC, and bands including Morris Day and the Time and the Commodores all bowed out for political reasons. Trump said he would open the State Fair with one of his political rallies instead, adding that he’d make July 4 “the most spectacular Trump rally of them all.”

    Was this the original plan?
    No. In 2016, Congress authorized a bipartisan nonprofit known as America250 to organize America’s milestone birthday. Inspired by the 1976 bicentennial — a widely praised extravaganza featuring 12 weeks of festivals on the Mall, events in every state, and the opening of the Air and Space Museum — the group said then it hoped to “educate, engage, and unite” Americans with programs across the country that would present and celebrate our history. So far, it has organized events such as a July 4 benefit concert in Los Angeles featuring Smashing Pumpkins and Queen Latifah; a succession of ball drops in New York City’s Times Square for each U.S. time zone on July 3; and the burying in Philadelphia of a huge time capsule to be opened in 2276. But it’s not very well funded. For the bicentennial, Congress had spent the equivalent of $900 million in today’s dollars. For this celebration, it has given less: some $80 million total between 2019 and 2025. While another $150 million was allocated in last year’s giant budget bill to top up the funds, the bulk of that money doesn’t go to America250 but to a rival group, Freedom 250. 

    What is Freedom 250?
    It’s the Trump-chaired White House task force behind the UFC fight and the fair. Created by one of Trump’s early executive orders specifically to take the place of the bipartisan America250, Freedom 250 consists entirely of Republicans, nearly all white men. Vice President JD Vance serves as vice chair, and most Cabinet members are on the task force. Over a quarter of the partners listed on Freedom 250’s website are Christian groups or have Christian affiliations, although it also has connections with firms such as John Deere and Northrop Grumman. Freedom 250 says its mission includes inviting Americans “to pray for our country and our people and rededicate ourselves as One Nation Under God.” Both groups are running events.

    How do the two groups differ?
    Democrats call Freedom 250 a “Trump vanity” project, saying it promotes a revisionist, overly sanitized version of American history. Freedom 250 materials for a student art contest, for instance, describe Martin Luther King Jr. as having a “can-do” attitude but don’t mention that he fought segregation. But the Trump administration said it had to create its own task force because America250 placed too much emphasis on the darker aspects of American history, like slavery and discrimination. Chris LaCivita, a former Trump campaign manager, even accused the commission of wanting “to apologize” for the past 250 years. Meanwhile, the two sides are now squabbling over funding. America250 was supposed to get $50 million of the celebration money Congress allocated last year. As of June, though, the Interior Department had transferred only half of that.

    Why the holdup? 
    The administration says America250 has overspent “on frivolous, poorly attended events.” It points to the America’s Field Trip initiative, an essay contest whose winners get trips to historic sites, which is costing an estimated $10.4 million. Yet the White House has also raised eyebrows with its spending. The Interior Department has splashed out $98 million to spruce up Washington, D.C., for the celebrations, gilding horse statues and repainting the Reflecting Pool. The huge triumphal arch that Trump wants to build will cost another $100 million, at least. Plus, there are allegations of corruption: Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) launched a probe into whether the White House was running a “pay-to-play” scheme by giving wealthy Freedom 250 donors access to Trump.

    Are Americans excited to turn 250?
    Some are. Major concerts, festivals, and parades are expected to draw big crowds in Boston; New York; Philadelphia; Richmond, Va.; and Charleston, S.C. But Gallup found that while 84% of Americans over 65 plan to celebrate, the number drops to 66% for those ages 40 to 64, and just 54% for those 18 to 39. An NBC News poll found the number of respondents who were “extremely” proud to be an American is at a record low of 33%, and 38% told Reuters/ Ipsos they don’t believe the U.S. will be around for its 500th birthday. Some historians blame the apathy on the president. “The carnival atmosphere of cage fights on the White House lawn and a concert that everyone seems to be backing out of tells you all you need to know,” says historian James Robenalt. “There is no serious look at the nation or its complicated history.”

     
     

    Only in America

    Republican Ken Paxton, running to represent Texas in the U.S. Senate, has challenged his Democratic rival, James Talarico, to prove “how much you love barbecue.” Talarico has been dogged by allegations of veganism, which he denies, and although his campaign recently released a photo of the candidate appearing to eat a turkey leg, Paxton chided Talarico for using a napkin, because real Texans don’t reach for sanitary paper products “until after it’s all over.”

     
     

    It wasn’t all bad

    A group of rescue donkeys and horses got an uplifting donation from one of the world’s premier soccer clubs: unwanted socks. Last year, Arsenal Football Club gave dozens of pairs of its famous red and white socks to Redwings Horse Sanctuary in Norfolk, U.K., which uses them to protect the legs of injured donkeys and horses from flies and to hold bandages in place. The long-and-tight Arsenal socks have worked better than other varieties, and the sanctuary’s head of communications, Nicola Knight, said that veterinarian visits have already declined. People usually offer items like buckets and brushes, Knight said, but football kits were “one of the most unusual donations we’ve ever had.”

     
     
    talking points

    U.S.-Israel: Iran deal upsets the alliance

    President Trump’s Iran deal-in-progress “is Israel’s disaster,” said Ruth Margalit in The New Yorker. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lobbied Trump to launch the Iran war, telling him they could together topple Iran’s Islamist regime, wipe out its ballistic missiles, and end its nuclear threat. Four months later, that war of choice has ended with Trump signing a “memorandum of understanding” with Tehran that not only leaves the hard-liners in charge but also does nothing to address Iran’s arsenal of long-range missiles or its stockpile of highly enriched uranium. “Perhaps most disturbingly for Israel,” said Lazar Berman in The Dispatch, the deal yields to Iran’s demand for a ceasefire in Lebanon, shielding its proxy Hezbollah from attack even as the terrorist group continues to “threaten Israel from the north.” Rubbing salt in the wound are the “gratuitous insults” from Trump, who has called Israel a “very small partner” and Netanyahu a loose cannon with “no f---ing judgment,” while praising the Iranians as “strong,” “smart,” and “very rational.”

    Vice President JD Vance also had some “harsh words for Israel,” said Aaron Blake in CNN.com. Responding to criticism of the Iran deal from top Israeli lawmakers, he warned the country to tread carefully. He noted the Jewish state’s reliance on U.S. weaponry, and said some Israeli leaders needed to “wake up and smell the reality” and defer to Trump, “the only head of state in the entire world” who’s still in their corner. It’s a stunning turnabout, said Matt K. Lewis in the Los Angeles Times. Broad bipartisan support for Israel was for decades “a law of physics” in the U.S. But Israel’s bloody campaign in Gaza following the Hamas atrocities of Oct. 7, 2023, “repelled” many young Americans. And by allying himself so closely with Trump to “gin up a war against Iran,” Netanyahu alienated mainstream Democrats and Never Trump conservatives and infuriated “America first” populists in the GOP. Today, some 60% of U.S. adults view Israel unfavorably, up from 42% in 2022.

    Netanyahu is in a bind of his own making, said Yair Rosenberg in The Atlantic. “He’s built his brand on two promises” to Israelis: that “he alone could withstand international pressure to compromise on Israeli security and that he alone could handle Trump.” Facing re-election in October, he must now choose whether to defy Trump and “save his reputation as a stalwart security hawk” or cave and maintain what’s left of their relationship. He’s learning the hard way that with Trump any alliance is a “marriage of convenience.” As “a student of power” himself, Netanyahu “should have seen this rug pull coming.”

     
     
    people

    Why Kimmel stays loyal

    Jimmy Kimmel always wants his friends around, said Kathryn VanArendonk in New York. Even at work hosting Jimmy Kimmel Live!, he’s surrounded by people who grew up with him in Brooklyn — where he lived till he was 9 — and Las Vegas. When ABC offered him the late-night role in 2002, he insisted the network hire his childhood best friend Cleto Escobedo III as band leader, and that Escobedo’s father should be in the band, too. Five of Kimmel’s relatives are current or former JKL! employees, including his wife, executive producer and head writer Molly McNearney. “I run the show like a Chinese restaurant,” says Kimmel, 58. “These are the people I trust.” He thinks his nepotism is why the show works. “I have this belief that if I think someone is funny, it will translate; other people will think that person is funny, too. And so far, I’ve been right.” Despite Kimmel’s liberal politics and his frequent on-air mockery of President Trump — who has demanded the late-night host be fired — he remains close with his longtime creative partner Adam Carolla, a libertarian who has regularly praised Trump. “I love Adam, and he loves me,” says Kimmel. He doesn’t believe he can change Carolla’s mind or that fighting with him would help. He’s happy to fight with Trump, though. “I don’t love him. I don’t hate him, either. I feel sorry for him. He obviously didn’t get hugged a lot.”

     
     

    Saturday Wrap was written and edited by Theunis Bates, Chris Erikson, Bill Falk, Bruno Maddox, Rebecca Nathanson, and Tim O’Donnell.

    Image credits, from top: Getty (2), Shutterstock, Getty
     

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