Trump to mark America 250 with campaign-style rally on National Mall

The Washington Monument is lit up as people attend The Great American State Fair on the National Mall to mark the Fourth of July, as the United States celebrates its 250th anniversary, in Washington, Friday. President Donald Trump will hold a rally on the Mall on Saturday.

The Washington Monument is lit up as people attend The Great American State Fair on the National Mall to mark the Fourth of July, as the United States celebrates its 250th anniversary, in Washington, Friday. President Donald Trump will hold a rally on the Mall on Saturday. (Cheney Orr, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • President Donald Trump will hold a rally on the National Mall to mark America's 250th anniversary on Saturday.
  • The rally will include military flyovers and a supersized fireworks display.
  • It comes as a Reuters poll shows many Americans feel the celebration is overly political.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump marks the country's 250th anniversary on Saturday with a political rally on a fenced-off National Mall ​in Washington, capping a weekslong celebration that has been widely criticized as divisive.

Across the U.S., Americans plan to celebrate the patriotic holiday with fireworks and parades. Philadelphia, where the Declaration of Independence from Britain was ‌signed on July 4, 1776, will offer free cupcakes and a six-hour pop music concert, while New York will feature tall ships from around the world.

In the ⁠nation's capital, Trump will place himself at the center of ​the celebration.

The president has billed his evening appearance among ⁠the city's iconic monuments as "the most spectacular TRUMP RALLY of them all," accompanied by military flyovers and a supersized fireworks ‌display.

Washington's annual July Fourth celebration typically ‌draws hundreds of thousands of people. Visitors this year must contend with stepped-up security, possible thunderstorms ⁠and temperatures that could top 100 degrees Fahrenheit.

Groups coming to Washington on Saturday included the ⁠white nationalist organization Patriot Front. The group posted on social media that it had arrived in the capital, and Reuters photographers saw hundreds of people dressed in Patriot Front outfits traveling on D.C. metro trains.

The organization, founded in 2017, is known for its aesthetics and heavily organized flash-mob style demonstrations.

Past presidents have steered clear of the celebration, but Trump has blurred the line between official commemoration and campaign-style politics.

A nonpartisan body set up in ‌2016 to handle the 250th anniversary has been largely sidelined by the Trump administration's ​Freedom 250 group, which has fenced off much of the 1.5-mile National Mall for a "Great American State Fair" featuring attractions such as a Ferris wheel alongside displays by conservative groups and defense contractors.

Several Democratic-led states declined to send delegations, and many performers who had been scheduled to appear dropped out, citing concerns about partisanship. Thousands were on hand for Trump's kickoff rally on June 24, but since then crowd sizes at the event have sometimes been modest.

Other activities with Freedom 250 branding include a faith rally featuring mostly conservative Christian speakers, and multiple sports events, ​including a card of mixed martial arts bouts on the White House grounds for Trump's 80th birthday. An IndyCar race in Washington is scheduled ‌for August.

The Freedom ‌250 organization also sponsored "Freedom ⁠Trucks" that critics say paint an overly religious version of American history and gloss over issues such as slavery and racial injustice.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll found that a majority of Americans, including three-quarters of Democrats and half of Republicans, think the events celebrating the country's 250th anniversary have grown too political.

Trump has sought to remake wide swaths of the capital city ahead of the ‌250th celebration, with mixed results. Many ​fountains and statues have been renovated, but problems have beset a much-touted $15 ‌million renovation of the Lincoln ⁠Memorial's Reflecting Pool and security ​cameras and soldiers now stand watch over its peeling paint and algae-fouled waters.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Andy Sullivan

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