Fetterman Breaks Ranks on Ballroom

Fetterman Breaks Ranks on Ballroom

Sen. John Fetterman is again stepping away from the usual Democratic line. After the weekend security scare tied to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, the Pennsylvania Democrat said people should stop fighting the White House ballroom plan and start backing it.

Fetterman said he was “there front and center” when the incident unfolded. His argument was blunt. The venue was not built for an event that puts the president, vice president, and other major officials in the same place. In his view, that alone makes the case for a larger, purpose-built space.

“After witnessing last night,” Fetterman called for people to “drop the TDS [Trump derangement syndrome] and build the White House ballroom.” He added that the ballroom would be useful for events “exactly like these.”

The project is now getting attention far beyond one senator’s comments. Sen. Lindsey Graham said Republicans are preparing legislation that would authorize $400 million for the ballroom. He also said the money could be covered through customs fees. Graham’s message was straightforward: build it sooner rather than later.

Fetterman’s stance is notable because he has often shown he is willing to split from his party when he thinks the political fight is missing the point. On this issue, he is arguing that a major national venue should be updated to match the real demands of the events it hosts.

Sen. Rand Paul also jumped in, saying, “I’m dropping a bill tomorrow. Let’s build the Ballroom.” That gives the proposal rare momentum and suggests the debate may move from social media into Congress faster than expected.

For Democrats, this is a frustrating split. For supporters of the project, it is a sign the opposition is losing steam. And with both Fetterman and GOP senators pressing the issue, the ballroom fight is turning into something bigger than a single weekend scare.

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