Presidential politics have potentially returned to the Commanders’ forthcoming $3.8 billion stadium and mixed-use development in the District of Columbia.
The plan to build at the site of RFK Stadium, the team’s former home, has been largely free of controversy since the D.C. council approved $1.1 billion in public funding for the project through two votes, first in early August and then in mid-September.
U.S. President Donald Trump, however, is looking to reinsert himself not only in the development process but also regarding the facility’s moniker. ESPN reported Saturday that Trump wants to have the domed stadium named for him when it opens in 2030.
“That would surely be a beautiful name, as it was President Trump who made the rebuilding of the new stadium possible,” said White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt in a statement provided to Front Office Sports.
There are multiple issues with that statement, however. The deal to transfer control of the federally owned land at RFK Stadium to the D.C. government—a critical step that jump-started the entire stadium effort—happened during the final days of Joe Biden’s presidential term.
The new venue, meanwhile, will be an entirely fresh construction, and not a “rebuilding.” And while certain federal agencies that are currently controlled by Trump or Trump loyalists will weigh in on certain matters related to the Commanders’ stadium, the project is largely a local matter now, following the land transfer.
Naming the facility after Trump, meanwhile, would also require the Commanders to forgo a critical revenue stream from the naming rights that will be worth at least eight figures annually. In some cases for NFL stadium naming rights, those fees exceed $20 million per year. The stadium deal between the D.C. government and the Commanders rests control of those naming rights with the team.
The Commanders declined to comment, but team sources said there have been no formal conversations with the White House on the stadium naming.
This also isn’t the first time Trump has sought to inject himself in the Commanders’ stadium pursuit, as he has also lobbied for the NFL team to revert to its prior nickname as a condition for the venue’s approval. D.C. council members downplayed that notion this past summer, and they proceeded with their efforts to review, and ultimately green-light, the stadium funding.
Rough Reaction
Trump, meanwhile, also appeared at Northwest Stadium on Sunday for the Commanders’ 44–22 loss to the Lions, where he was a guest of team owner Josh Harris. There, Trump became the first sitting U.S. president to attend an NFL regular-season game since Jimmy Carter in 1978.
The president participated in a halftime salute to military service, where he was loudly booed by attending fans. He also appeared in the Fox Sports broadcast booth, where he was not asked about the stadium naming issue. Trump did bring up the facility himself, though.
“They’re going to build a beautiful stadium in Washington. That’s what I’m involved in, getting all the approvals and everything else,” he said. “They’ve got a wonderful owner with Josh [Harris] and his group, and you’re going to see some very good things.”