Trump Administration Announces Kennedy Center Closure, Faces Census Test Cutbacks
Washington, D.C. – The Trump administration announced plans to temporarily close the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for approximately two years starting July 4, 2026, coinciding with the country's 250th anniversary, according to Time. The closure, framed as a renovation project, follows a year-long review involving contractors, musical experts, arts institutions, and advisors, as stated by Trump on Truth Social.
This announcement comes amid other developments involving the Trump administration, including scaling back plans for the 2030 census field test and the release of a five-year-old boy previously detained by ICE.
The Kennedy Center closure follows a period of cancellations by artists slated to perform at the venue, after the President upended the Center's leadership and appended his name to the space last year, Time reported.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration is scaling back plans for this year's field test of the 2030 census, raising concerns about the Census Bureau's ability to produce a reliable population tally for redistributing political representation and federal funding in the next decade, according to NPR News. The 2026 test was designed to help the bureau improve the accuracy of the country's upcoming once-a-decade head count. A mix of communities in six states, as well as a national sample of households, was expected to take part in the test.
In other news, Liam Conejo Ramos, the five-year-old who was detained by immigration agents in Minnesota, was released after a federal judge ordered his release a day earlier, Time reported. He boarded a plane on Sunday morning in Texas with his father, Adrian Conejo Arias, who was detained with him. Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas said he picked up the father and son on Saturday night and escorted them back to Minnesota. "Liam is now home. With his hat and his backpack," Castro wrote on social media. The boy's case gained national attention when he was photographed on Jan. 20 wearing a blue bunny hat and a Spider-Man backpack, being detained by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in the driveway of his home.
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