Chelsea Clinton’s op-ed lands at the intersection of memory and raw politics, drawing on her own childhood inside the White House to argue that its walls belong to the public, not any one president’s ego. To her, the East Wing demolition and privately funded ballroom are less about logistics and more about a philosophy: authority without accountability, change without reverence, power without humility. Her critics respond by attacking her family’s history, not her argument, turning a preservation debate into another trench in America’s endless culture war.Trump and his allies insist this is routine modernization on a grander scale, a chance to host bigger summits and showcase American prestige. Preservationists counter that once historic fabric is gone, it never returns. In the end, the ballroom is just concrete and glass; the real battle is over who gets to define what “the people’s house” should look like — and what, or whom, it is willing to forget.
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