Apparently Donald Trump doesn’t want the public to see reminders of his immediate predecessors when they visit the White House. Portraits of former presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and George H.W. Bush have been relocated from prominent public display to the top of a staircase that few people can access, CNN reported.
According to two CNN sources familiar with the matter, Trump ordered staff to put Obama’s portrait at the top of the Grand Staircase that leads to the White House residence, an area only a few White House staff and Secret Service agents can access. One of those sources also said that both Bush portraits now reside in the same staircase.
This counters decades of precedent and White House protocol that historically has placed recent former presidents’ portraits in places of prominence visible to guests and visitors.
This is the second time Trump has relocated Obama’s portrait. The first time, he moved it from one side of the White House Grand Foyer to another. In its place, Trump put a painting of himself raising his fist after the assassination attempt in Butler, Penn.
He has transformed the Oval Office, covering it in tacky gold leaf accents to match the president’s gaudy taste. In June, Trump removed a bust of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., from the Oval Office. He also removed a pot of Swedish ivy that had been in the room for 50 years. He tripled how many paintings were displayed on the office’s walls while adding gilded accents, golden eagle statues, and even cherub figurines from Mar-a-Lago, where Trump spends most of his weekends.
From Rolling Stone US
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