Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Trump adviser Stephen Miller insists East Wing of White House ‘is not part of the White House’ – as it happened

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Stephen Miller insists the East Wing of the White House ‘is not part of The White House’

In an appearance on Fox News on Friday, Stephen Miller defended the unannounced demolition of the entire East Wing of the White House this week by arguing that the extension built nearly 125 years ago was not really part of the White House.

“The East Wing, which importantly is not part of the White House, it is not part of the residence. It was a cheaply built add-on structure …[it] is badly in need of refurbishment, repair and renovation,” Miller argued, as images of the total demolition played on screen beside him, seeming to undermine the idea that what is taking place could be described as mere repair or renovation.

Miller appeared to make explicit the argument Donald Trump hinted at on Wednesday, when he said that the misleading images made it look like his construction of a new grand ballroom was “touching the White House. We don’t touch the White House.”

Miller was not challenged on the logic of his claim that the East Wing of the White House was not part of the White House, but he did have some trouble getting it straight in his own head. Trump, he said, deserved praise for “repairing, finally, an area of the White House that has been left in disrepair for decades”.

Among other things, the logic used by Trump and Miller to describe the East Wing as not part of the White House would seem to suggest that the West Wing, where Trump and Miller have their offices, is also not part of the White House and could be demolished by them without any explanation or warning.

During Trump’s first administration, however, his administration described Christmas decorations in the East Wing, directed by noted Christmas-lover Melania Trump, as an integral part of “Christmas at the White House.”

In 2018, a central feature of the holiday decorations was the Gold Star Family tree, decorated by Gold Star families, in the East Wing. That same year, a much-mocked image of Melania Trump inspecting rows of blood-red Christmas trees was taken in the East Colonnade, which connected the East Wing to the main residence, until it was demolished this week to make way for the ballroom.

Melania Trump reviewed blood-red trees along the East Colonnade as part of the 2018 White House Christmas decorations.
Melania Trump reviewed blood-red trees along the East Colonnade as part of the 2018 White House Christmas decorations. Photograph: Andrea Hanks/Planet Pix/Zuma/REX/Shutterstock

Trump and his aides have reacted angrily this week to suggestions that the demolition of the East Wing was a surprise, despite the fact that Trump himself said, when plans were first released in July, that the ballroom “won’t interfere with the current building. It’ll be near it but not touching it.”

Still, they do have a point, in that the project description posted on the White House website in July did suggest, without mentioning any demolition, that the ballroom would be located where the East Wing stood from 1902 until this week.

This is how the site of the new ballroom was described, in a text that many reporters, officials and members of the public apparently read past:

The White House Ballroom will be substantially separated from the main building of the White House, but at the same time, it’s theme and architectural heritage will be almost identical. The site of the new ballroom will be where the small, heavily changed, and reconstructed East Wing currently sits. The East Wing was constructed in 1902 and has been renovated and changed many times, with a second story added in 1942.

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Key events

Closing summary

We have reached the end of another day’s live coverage of the second Trump administration. Thanks for reading. Here are the latest developments:

  • One day after Donald Trump said an unnamed “friend” had just sent “a check for $130m” to be used to pay military salaries during the government shutdown, a Pentagon spokesperson confirmed that the defense department “accepted an anonymous donation of $130m under its general gift acceptance authority”.

  • A federal appeals court paused a ruling by a three-judge panel issued earlier this week that paved the way for Trump to deploy troops to Portland, Oregon.

  • The justice department announced that it intends to send federal observers from its civil rights division to “monitor polling sites” in five California counties and one New Jersey county during “the upcoming November 4, 2025, general election”.

  • The conservative premier of Ontario, Doug Ford, said that he has decided to pause the advertising campaign that drew ire from Trump, but only after it plays during World Series games over the weekend.

  • New York attorney general Letitia James has pleaded not guilty to two felony charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution.

  • Despite Trump’s claims to the contrary, prices continued to rise in September, increasing at an annual rate of 3%, according to a government inflation report.

  • The US is sending the Gerald Ford aircraft carrier and its accompanying warships to waters off Latin America and the Caribbean.

  • Stephen Miller defended the unannounced demolition of the entire East Wing of the White House this week by arguing that the extension built nearly 125 years ago was not really part of the White House.

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