Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche late April 27 asked a federal judge to lift his order halting President Donald Trump’s planned $400 million ballroom, in a filing remarkably close in style and tone to the president’s social media posts.
Blanche wrote that the shooting attack at the White House correspondents’ dinner Saturday demonstrated that “reasonable minds” could not oppose the proposed heavily secured ballroom in a filing to U.S. District Judge Richard Leon. Leon ruled on March 31 that aboveground construction on the project must stop until the project had been approved by Congress in response to a lawsuit filed by the National Trust for Historical Preservation.
“The National Trust for Historic Preservation” is a beautiful name, but even their name is FAKE because when they add the words “in the United States” to the National Trust for Historic Preservation, it makes it sound like a Governmental Agency, which it is not,” the filing began.
“After the Saturday night attempted assassination, which could have never taken place in the new facility, reasonable minds can no longer differ — The injunction must be dissolved,” Blanche wrote, going on to describe the preservation group as suffering from “Trump Derangement Syndrome, commonly referred to as TDS.”












