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Likewise, as I mentioned before, there's practical security reasons for being able to host larger government social functions on WH property as opposed trying to secure public venues like hotels, etc...Yes, especially if it included removing the earlier building. I don't think any of those who approved of that, have a problem with Trump destroying parts of the building due to them being dead. Also the political opposition back then probably thought it was a good idea due to the construction of the underground bunker beneath it, it was war after all.
And the motion picture industry paying for renovations because "landing a screening at the White House family theater" was a valuable marketing tool is the sort of the "private influence" people are voicing concerns about now, correct?
And the cost of those projects weren't even made public.
And it seems as if there were some similar criticisms tossed around with prior renovations going back to Jefferson.
Per TheHill:
The East Wing’s razing was met with criticism both by preservationists and by more than half of the American public. In death, the East Wing has come full circle, as it received criticism at the time of its birth during early 1800s.
President Thomas Jefferson, who served two terms 1801-09, first ordered the installation of colonnades on both the eastern and western sides of the White House, according to the White House Historical Association
Newspaper editorials slammed the additions, while the opposing Federalist Party suggested that the colonnades reflected “aristocratic tendencies” from Jefferson, the WHHA described.
But the colonnades remained until 1866 and were then replaced in 1902, under President Theodore Roosevelt’s overhaul of the White House, to allow for a main entrance for social events
Under FDR's 1942 renovations, controversy stemmed from it being completed with World War II unfolding in the background. Republicans called the construction wasteful and accused FDR of using the White House makeover to improve his image.
This all sounds like very familiar... like history repeating itself just a tad.
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