Donald Trump Accused Of ‘Crash-And-Burn’ Management As Kennedy Center Set To Close
When Donald Trump announced the Kennedy Centre would shut its doors for two years beginning in July, the performing arts world held its breath. But behind the glossy rhetoric about ‘revitalisation’ and ‘world-class transformation’ lies a far more troubling narrative: a venue haemorrhaging world-renowned artists, struggling to book new acts, and potentially imploding under a management style one senator has likened to a ‘crash-and-burn property gamble.’
The closure announcement, made via Trump’s Truth Social platform on Sunday evening, came amid a crisis of confidence at America’s most prestigious cultural institution. Composer Philip Glass became the latest heavyweight to walk away, withdrawing his Symphony No. 15 ‘Lincoln’ because the venue’s values now stand in ‘direct conflict’ with the piece’s message.
The Washington National Opera had already announced it would perform elsewhere. These aren’t minor departures—they’re symbolic ones. When canonical artists of Glass’s stature vote with their feet, it signals something is fundamentally broken.
The real controversy isn’t about whether the Kennedy Centre needs renovation—nearly every building does. It’s whether the purported ‘inability to secure acts’ for the next two years forced Trump’s hand.
Observers have connected the dots between the venue’s problems booking performances and the sudden announcement of a two-year closure. A telling X post suggested the obvious: ‘Is this what you do when the Kennedy Center can’t sell tickets or book performers?’ The question lingers uncomfortably.
Trump’s Kennedy Center Management: A Pattern of Strategic Collapse?
The moment Trump’s plans surfaced, Senator Andy Kim of New Jersey didn’t mince words. Posting to X, he declared: ‘We here in Jersey know Trump’s track record of crash and burn property management. We can’t let him do to the Kennedy Center what he did to Atlantic City.’ The invocation of Atlantic City carries considerable weight, functioning as a metaphor for what mismanagement looks like when unchecked.
Trump Plaza opened in 1984, when Trump was still a real estate entrepreneur finding his feet in the Atlantic City casino boom. For a glittering moment in the 1980s and early 1990s, it was the place to be. A-list celebrities made appearances. Mike Tyson fought there. The Rolling Stones performed next door. The venue even secured a cameo in the blockbuster film Ocean’s Eleven—George Clooney and Brad Pitt‘s characters plucked their recruit, Bernie Mac, from Trump Plaza’s gaming floor.
Bob McDevitt, president of the main casino workers’ union, remembered those glory days vividly. ‘It oozed glamour and buzz when it first opened,’ he said. But triumph proved fleeting. When Trump opened the nearby Trump Taj Mahal in 1990, a venture saddled with crushing debt, resources, and capital flooded into the shiny new property. Trump Plaza withered on the vine.
By the time it shuttered in 2014, it was the weakest performer in Atlantic City, bringing in as much money in 8½ months as the market-leading Borgata did every two weeks. That same year, Atlantic City’s casino landscape collapsed from 12 properties to nine, but Trump Plaza fell hardest.
It’s the cautionary tale that haunts Trump’s Kennedy Centre tenure. And it matters because the parallels—neglect, distraction, strategic fumbling—bear uncomfortable weight.
The Unravelling: Why Artists Are Walking Away from Kennedy Center Management
The Kennedy Centre, founded to honour President Kennedy’s memory and his commitment to the arts, has always been more than a venue. It’s a temple of American culture. Yet under Trump’s stewardship, which includes his controversial decision to add his name to the institution, something has shifted.
The centre’s board has struggled to attract new acts. The announcement of a two-year closure, ostensibly to address structural and financial deterioration, has sent shockwaves through the performing arts world—but the timing raises eyebrows.
Trump’s closure announcement, delivered in elaborate Truth Social prose, claimed the centre had been ‘in bad condition, both financially and structurally for many years.’ He promised a ‘world-class’ rebirth that would ‘rival and surpass’ any other cultural facility.
Yet he offered precious little detail on financing, simply asserting it was ‘completed’ and ‘fully in place’. No specifics. No timeline beyond ‘approximately two years.’ No clarity on who pays if costs balloon, a concern not unwarranted, given Trump’s historical relationship with construction projects.
Leading performing arts organisations have responded by voting with their feet. When Philip Glass, one of contemporary music’s towering figures, announces his withdrawal because the centre’s values conflict with his work’s message, it’s not a minor loss. It’s a referendum on whether Trump’s vision for the venue aligns with the institution’s cultural soul.
The superintendent of a leading national arts academy, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested the unspoken truth: ‘Artists don’t want their work associated with what the Kennedy Centre has become. The closure might actually be a gift—a chance to reset under new leadership.’ Whether that reset happens remains an open question.
Originally published on IBTimes UK