By Jonathan Chait
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
The president of the United States announced
last month that, in place of performances by Martina McBride, Young MC, the
surviving members of the Commodores, one member of Poison, and other
sought-after musicians who had dropped out after being recruited on apparently
false pretenses, he would personally provide the entertainment for a
250th-anniversary celebration of American independence.
“On Wednesday, June 24th, at 7 P.M., in magnificent
Washington, D.C., now totally beautified, and one of the Safest Cities anywhere
in the World, and in celebration of our Country’s 250 Year History, we will be
bringing you, LIVE, the Greatest Rally, EVER!” Donald Trump wrote on Truth
Social. “It will be special at every level—A Rally to end all Rallies!”
This week, he announced another rally, to take place July
4. “We are going to host the most spectacular TRUMP RALLY of them all, a
‘TRIBUTE TO AMERICA.’” The Rally to end all Rallies will apparently end them
for a mere week and a half.
The shambolic decision to turn the quarter-millennium
anniversary of the Declaration of Independence into yet another rally is,
perhaps, an inevitable outgrowth of Trump’s megalomania, which renders him
unable to keep separate the functions of party leader and head of state. In
merging the two, he has trashed the latter.
Head of state and leader of the governing party are two
different roles that, in many countries, are held by different people. In the
United Kingdom, the head of state is a monarch. In Israel, it is a president.
Both positions differ from the more political role of the prime minister.
The United States gives both roles to the president.
Traditionally, presidents have responded to this burden by tailoring the part
to the occasion. They would act as a party leader when, say, giving a routine
press conference, but as head of state when, for example, meeting foreign
leaders or addressing the country during a national disaster or a war. In some
cases, the division is marked by rules or norms, which Trump characteristically
disregards. There is a law, called the Hatch Act, that limits the use of the
presidency for political activities (say, holding a political convention at the
White House), which the Trump administration systematically
violated during his 2020 reelection campaign.
The wall Trump began dismantling in his first term has
been obliterated in the second. Presidents are not supposed to give partisan
speeches to active-duty military, but Trump instructed
soldiers in February that “you have to vote for us.” Trump has treated the
federal government as an extension of his party, which in turn is an extension
of himself. He has draped government buildings with his likeness, and he
celebrated his birthday with free admission to national parks and an Army
parade. The putative excuse for the Army parade, that it was for the branch’s
250th birthday, is rendered dubious in the extreme by the absence of any
similar observance for the same birthday of the Navy or Marines.
Trump has commissioned a Trump Gold Card for wealthy
immigrants, Trump Accounts for children, TrumpRx for prescription drugs, and a
“Trump class” battleship. He renamed the U.S. Institute for Peace and the
Kennedy Center after himself, and when a judge ordered him to remove his name
from the latter, Trump installed a tarp to cover John F. Kennedy’s, too.
My colleague Michael Scherer reported
on the administration’s decision to supersede America250, a nonpartisan
organization dedicated to celebrating this year’s Independence Day, with a
partisan analogue, Freedom 250. This process accomplished in a more formal and
bureaucratized fashion the same objective Trump has carried out informally by
treating the presidency as a vehicle for personal glorification and profit. The
problem Freedom 250 set out to solve was that Congress had planned a patriotic
celebration (one that would cast the president in a head-of-state role) when he
preferred an event that would highlight MAGA values (Trump as party leader).
His goal in all of these maneuvers has been to convert a
public asset—in this case, the prestige of the presidency—into a private
holding. By doing so, however, he has devalued the currency. That is why
Freedom 250 was reduced to booking acts one level above the bar-mitzvah
tier—many entertainers would be flattered to perform at a ceremony honoring the
nation, but far fewer would accept a gig at one designed explicitly to glorify
Trump. Vanilla Ice, one of the last remaining musical acts willing to appear at
the rally, explained, “You play for your fans. And I’ll go play for Putin, and
I’ll play in Iran if you want. It don’t matter.” For the talent to compare the
president to, respectively, a notorious dictator and a regime that he has
sought to topple with military force was probably not the message Trump had in
mind when he planned the event.
Trump’s predecessors were hardly saints. They understood
that performing nonpartisan roles conferred on them a dignity and measure of
good feeling that had political side benefits. During his term, Joe Biden
visited Kentucky after a tornado and told the people he met that he was there
to support them regardless of whether they voted for him. He surely believed
that idealistic message, but he also understood that it made him appear
presidential. Occasionally being above politics is good politics.
If Trump were smarter, he would understand that
husbanding the political capital of the office of the presidency pays off
eventually. But this calculation would require him to think long term, rather
than to greedily snatch whatever reward presents itself to him in the moment.
Sadly, Trump’s inability to forgo immediate fulfillment is as pronounced an
aspect of his personality as his megalomania. Well, nobody’s perfect.
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