Here’s the latest I can confirm from available reporting:
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A federal judge (Judge Richard Leon) ruled in late March 2026 that construction of the White House ballroom must halt until Congress approves the project, citing the need for legislative authorization and potential national-security implications. This order initially paused above-ground work, though underground/patient-safety-related work was discussed in related rulings. The ruling drew subsequent attention from the D.C. appellate panel, which urged reconsideration of national-security considerations and allowed limited further work under review.[3][4][6][8]
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In mid-April 2026, there were developments clarifying what portions of the project could proceed; one report indicates a judge allowed some “national security” work to proceed at the site, while maintaining restrictions on above-ground construction pending congressional authorization. Coverage also notes ongoing debates about safety measures and whether certain construction activities fall within or outside the injunction’s scope.[7][9][3]
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Public and national outlets covered the dispute extensively, including reactions from President Trump and commentary on the role of Congress and security considerations in determining the project’s fate.[1][7]
If you’d like, I can compile a short, cited summary with precise dates and quote snippets, or pull the most up-to-date articles from specific outlets you prefer (e.g., NYT, PBS, CBS). Would you like a focused recap with direct quotes and a timeline?
Citations:
- Judge rules halt until Congress approves; nationwide security concerns cited[6]
- Later orders permitting some security-related work; above-ground work still restricted[3][7]
- Appeals panel guidance and safety considerations[4][3]
- Broad coverage and reactions from multiple outlets[1][7]
Sources
President Donald Trump has railed against a federal judge’s decision that continues to block above-ground construction of a $400 million White House ballroom.
www.clickondetroit.comBut underground construction work on a presidential bunker underneath the ballroom can continue, the judge said.
www.cbsnews.comTrump responded to the ruling by complaining that the National Trust for Historic Preservation doesn't appreciate his efforts at "sprucing up" Washington's buildings.
news.wjct.orgPresident Donald Trump has railed against a federal judge's decision that continues to block above-ground construction of a $400 million White House ballroom. The decision on Thursday allows only...
www.sfgate.comA federal judge required the president to seek lawmakers' input and pursue traditional approvals before proceeding with the $400 million replacement for the East Wing.
www.nytimes.comPresident Donald Trump has railed against a federal judge's decision that continues to block above-ground construction of a $400 million White House ballroom
www.usnews.comPresident Donald Trump railed against a federal judge's decision on Thursday that continues to block above-ground construction of a $400 million White House ballroom, allowing only below-ground work…
www.pbs.orgBut underground construction work on a presidential bunker underneath the ballroom can continue, the judge said.
www.cbsnews.comBut underground construction work on a presidential bunker underneath the ballroom can continue, the judge said.
www.cbsnews.com