White House Faces Backlash Over $350M Funding Shift for East Wing Security Modernization
June 18, 2026
The White House faces scrutiny over a funding shift for the East Wing modernization, with Democrats alleging more than $350 million originally from President Trump’s tax-cut bill was redirected to security needs for the ballroom project, despite Trump’s claim that private donors would cover it.
Officials describe the East Wing upgrade as integrating extensive security features—bomb shelters, bulletproofing, drone-detection, a medical facility, and a new visitors screening facility—with about $220 million dedicated to hardening the ballroom addition and $180 million for the new screening facility.
White House officials argue Trump and donors are funding roughly $400 million of the project, pointing to fortified security measures as the justification for the reallocation.
Senators from both parties expressed concern and sought clarification, with some urging that funds be used as originally intended for protection efforts.
Constitutional questions arise about the separation of powers and legality of reallocating funds allocated by Congress for executive branch security, highlighting that Congress retains ultimate appropriation authority.
Concerns are raised that the funding shift bypasses constitutional allocations, even as the White House argues security needs require action.
A federal judge indicated the administration may have overstepped authority by demolishing the East Wing without congressional approval, and construction faces ongoing legal challenges.
Watchdogs warn that corporate donations from Meta, Coinbase, and Lockheed Martin could create conflicts of interest given their government involvement.
The reallocation reportedly draws from funds originally meant for Secret Service personnel, training, programming, technology, and retention bonuses, raising questions about safety priorities versus vanity construction.
Prominent voices call for greater transparency and review, including a senator urging scrutiny and representatives condemning the funding as a misallocation of taxpayer dollars.
The shift comes after Congress rejected a $1 billion request for the ballroom, with funds moved from Secret Service accounts intended for hiring and training.
About $352 million was reclassified on June 12 into procurement and operations accounts, with most drawn from a procurement, construction, and improvements fund despite limits on Secret Service construction funding.
Summary based on 11 sources
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Sources

The Guardian • Jun 18, 2026
Trump administration quietly shifts $352m in federal funds for White House ballroom
Bloomberg Government • Jun 17, 2026
White House Security Money Transfer Probed by Key GOP Senator
Hindustan Times • Jun 18, 2026
Did Trump use $352M Secret Service funds for White House ballroom? Report makes explosive claim | Hindustan Times
The Philadelphia Inquirer • Jun 18, 2026
Budget office redirects $352M in Secret Service funds to White House security