While Leavitt and Trump both claimed that the board had “unanimously” voted to rename the centre, at least one board member has disputed that.
“This was not unanimous,” said Ohio Democratic Representative Joyce Beatty, one of the board’s members. “I was muted on the call and not allowed to speak or voice my opposition to this move.”
Work on a national performing arts centre began in the 1950s and after Kennedy, the 35th president, was assassinated in 1963, Congress decided to turn it into a living memorial to him.
Some US lawmakers and legal scholars have been quick to note that because the centre was named in a 1964 law, Congress must vote to make the name change official.
A measure to officially call the centre’s opera venue the First Lady Melania Trump Opera House, for example, was introduced as part of a spending bill this summer. The bill has not yet come up for a vote.
That, however, does not necessarily prevent the centre from changing its name on its website or tickets, and potentially on the exterior of the building itself.
A similar name change took place at the Department of Defense – now known as the Department of War – without Congressional approval in September.
Trump’s involvement in the centre has been criticised by some political opponents as unnecessary political interference in the arts by the White House. Lin Manuel Miranda and his producing partner canceled a run of Hamilton at the centre and other visiting artists scrapped their planned appearances in recent months.
At the same time, locals appear to have stayed away, with the Washington Post and other local news outlets reporting that ticket sales and subscriptions have fallen since Trump took over.
Earlier this year, the president said he was “98% involved” in the selection of this year’s Kennedy Center honourees, which included action star Sylvester Stallone and members of the rock band KISS.
At the time, Trump said he had rejected “wokesters” from being considered for the honour.
In June, during Trump’s first appearance at the Kennedy Center since returning to the White House, audience members both booed and cheered him and First Lady Melania Trump as they entered the presidential box.