
Army 250th anniversary parade marches on despite weather worries
President Donald Trump’s controversial military parade kicked off 30 minutes early to avoid inclement weather.
WASHINGTON – The Fourth of July isn’t until Friday, but for President Donald Trump, the party begins one day earlier on July 3.
And then the celebration will continue for the next 365 days.
To mark the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, the White House is planning a full year of events across the country that will culminate in one year on July 4, 2026, exactly 250 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Trump is set to kick off the yearlong countdown to America’s 250th birthday with a speech Thursday night at the Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines that will include “patriotic entertainment” and fireworks.
Trump ‒ who has long embraced patriotic themes and imagery to complement his “America first” agenda ‒ already had a controversial taxpayer-funded military parade on the streets of Washington, D.C., last month. (The parade marked the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and also fell on the president’s 79th birthday.)
Now he has an opportunity to drape himself in the red, white and blue for the next 12 months.
“We are planning parties. We are planning a national celebration to really unite the country,” Monica Crowley, the White House’s ambassador for major U.S.-hosted events, including the 250th anniversary celebration, said this week in an interview on Fox News, where she was previously a contributor. “Bring the country together out of shared patriotism, shared values and a renewed sense of civic pride.”
By losing the 2020 election but winning in 2024, Trump has noted that he now gets to be president for America’s 250th birthday and when the United States hosts the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the world’s most popular sporting event both in the same year. In the summer of 2028, while he’s still in his second term, Los Angeles plays host to the Summer Olympics.
“Can you imagine? I missed that four years and now look what I have. I have everything,” Trump said May 26 at National Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day. “Amazing the way things work out. God did that. I believe that, too,” he added with a laugh.
Who is leading the 250th birthday efforts?
In Des Moines, Trump is expected to unveil efforts to create the “Great American State Fair,” a concept he touted on the 2024 campaign trail as a “unique, one-year exhibition featuring pavilions from all 50 states.” He said the fair will showcase the “glory of every state in the union,” promote pride in American history and highlight U.S. innovation. He promised in a 2023 video speech to make Iowa ‒ which votes first in the Republican primary ‒ the home of the one-time festival that will also include “patriots games” for high school athletes to compete.
“Together, we will built it and they will come,” Trump said then.
The festivities, dubbed America250, are organized under a nonprofit with the same name created in 2019 after Congress took action three years earlier to create the U.S. Semiquincentennial Commission to begin organizing the country’s 250th anniversary celebration.
The initiative is supposed to be a nonpartisan affair, but The Atlantic reported the group has effectively been operating “as an arm of Trump’s White House operation.”
America250’s newly named executive director is Ariel Abergel, a former producer of Fox News’ Fox and Friends who interned at the White House during Trump’s first term. He’s brought with him other former Fox News employees, according to The Atlantic, and enlisted the help of Trump campaign aides, including senior adviser Chris LaCivita.
Corporate sponsors of America250 include several led by executives who have sought to curry favor with Trump, including Ultimate Fighting Championship, Amazon, Coinbase and Oracle.
Trump, in a post on Truth Social, said the America250 kickoff in Iowa “will be a very special event, honoring our Great Country, and our Brave Heroes who fought to keep us FREE.”
It could also give Trump his first chance to publicly tout passage of his so-called “big, beautiful bill” ‒ but only if he’s able to push House Republicans to sign off on the massive tax and spending bill before his self-imposed holiday deadline.
Trump has a history of turning traditionally nonpartisan events into supercharged political spectacles. In a June 10 speech to troops at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Trump slammed California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass as “incompetent” ‒ prompting some soldiers to boo their names ‒ and referred to Los Angeles as a “trash heap.” He also singled out media covering the event as “fake news,” making the speech sound more like a Trump campaign rally than an address to uniformed troops.
What America250 events are planned for the coming year?
Trump signed a Jan. 29 executive order directing his administration to organize “a grand celebration worthy of the momentous occasion” of America’s 250th birthday. That included creating a task force on celebrating the 250th anniversary, composed of Trump Cabinet secretaries and chaired by Trump and Vice President JD Vance.
Each federal department and agency has assigned a point person to coordinate with the White House on America250 planning, a White House official told USA TODAY.
The full slate of America250 activities and projects have not been announced, but some are in the works.
The most widely publicized plans are for a “National Garden of American Heroes” that will honor 250 American heroes across a wide range of fields. Trump reinstated plans for the garden, which he had pushed in his first term, as part of his America250 executive order. A location for the garden hasn’t been decided. An updated timeline calls for it to be completed “as expeditiously as possible.”
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced a “Great American Road Trip” to mark America’s 250th birthday that will highlight popular travel routes, historic landmarks and scenic destinations in all 50 states.
The White House has started unveiling videos showing a narrated cartoon version of signers of the Declaration of Independence, such as President Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Heyward Jr. of South Carolina. In the final year of his first White House term, Trump created a “1776 Commission” to promote what he called “patriotic education.”
There’s also a nationwide student writing and artwork contest in which children are asked to answer, “What does America mean to you?” A storytelling project looks to preserve firsthand accounts of Americans, both famous and lesser-known. And an America Gives initiative aims to increase volunteerism.
An effort is underway for all 50 states to collect items for a “time capsule” that will be buried in Philadelphia on July 4, 2026. A traveling tech expo is set to display American innovations across the country. And celebrations will also mark the 250th anniversary of the Navy and Air Force ‒ though neither is expected to include a parade like the U.S. Army received for its 250th anniversary.
And you can bet Trump will headline several more America250 events after Iowa.
“It really is a gift to have him in office,” Crowley said. “Can you imagine the other team being in office for America250?”
Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.