Point/Counterpoint: Trump's first 100 days a MAGA mess of authoritarian overreach
- In early April 2025, a gathering promoted as the official party marking the initial 100 days of President Donald Trump’s administration took place at Top of the Town in Arlington, Virginia.
- The event was moved from the Kennedy Center after the venue ended their contract, and it was organized by people claiming Republican alignment but lacking official affiliation.
- Attendees reported no VIP treatment or red carpet, the promised high-profile guests were absent, and event hosts behaved unprofessionally according to witnesses.
- Ticket prices ranged between $200 and $1,000, with one attendee paying nearly $600 for a Patriot ticket and describing the experience as a scam and misleading.
- Local Republican leaders condemned the event for damaging the Party's brand, a police report for false advertising was filed, and all event social media and websites were taken down.
21 Articles
21 Articles


A party for Trump’s first 100 days was billed as ‘official’ — it was anything but that
In early April, news of an “official” party celebrating President Donald Trump‘s first 100 days in office began circulating in some Republican circles. It was marketed as the official party to celebrate the milestone, being held at the Kennedy Center,…
Trump’s first 100 days: How Boulder is feeling the impact
The first 100 days of the Trump administration have been marked by a flurry of executive orders, aggressive immigration policies, a rapid shrinking of the federal government under the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and what some legal scholars warn is a shift towards authoritarianism. Boulder Reporting Lab has been closely covering how these national changes are playing out locally — and we’re doubling down to keep our community as …
Lincoln’s First 100 Days - The American Spectator | USA News and Politics
Among the most fatuous exercises engaged in by the Fourth Estate after the voters elect a chief executive is the publication of the dreaded “first 100 days” editorial. Having endured a protracted and usually acrimonious political campaign, the long-suffering public is subjected to utterly predictable screeds penned by the new president’s enemies and equally inevitable encomia written by his supporters. All of this blather is predicated on the pr…
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