×

Trump considers dropping Freedom 250 concerts in D.C. after artists pull out

By Thomson Reuters May 30, 2026 | 11:28 AM

WASHINGTON, May 30 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump said on Saturday he is considering canceling a planned series of concerts on Washington’s National Mall commemorating the nation’s 250th anniversary after a ​string of artists withdrew from the event, and replacing them ‌with a speech and political-style rally instead.

The concerts were planned as part of the larger Great American State Fair, a 16-day event running from June 25 to July 10, 2026. Organizers said the fair, organized by the Freedom 250 group, would stretch ‌on ​the National Mall from the U.S. Capitol to ⁠the Washington Monument, with concert ⁠stages, state pavilions, exhibits, rides, and other attractions spread across the Mall.

But the musical lineup has been hit by a series of cancellations. On Friday, Bret Michaels, the lead singer of the rock band ​Poison, became the fifth performer to withdraw from the concerts, saying that the event was not the nonpartisan celebration that he thought it would ⁠be.

Organizers have not publicly detailed the ⁠reasons for the departures, though the exits have raised questions ​about the viability of the event as originally envisioned.

In a post on ​Truth Social on Saturday, Trump suggested the concert series may ‌no longer be necessary if performers continue to back out. He floated the possibility of giving a speech on the National Mall instead, portraying himself as a more powerful draw than any musical act.

“The fact is that ⁠I am, according to many, the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World,” Trump wrote. He added that he gets “much larger audiences than Elvis in ⁠his prime” and “does so ‌without a guitar.”

The president said he is “ordering my Representatives ⁠to look at the feasibility of doing an AMERICA ​IS ‌BACK Rally.”

Freedom 250 is a public-private partnership created by ​the White ⁠House to coordinate celebrations of the United States’ 250th anniversary alongside federal agencies.

It remains unclear whether replacement musicians will be recruited, or whether Trump’s proposal to substitute a rally for the performances is being seriously considered by organizers.

(Reporting by David Shepardson and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Nia Williams, Sergio Non ​and Alistair Bell)