Kennedy Center changed board rules months before vote to add Trump's name
The new rules say only trustees appointed by the president can vote, barring other members, including Democrats who hold seats, from decisions. The center said the change reflects longstanding precedent.
Kennedy Center changed board rules months before vote to add Trumpâs name. The cultural center said only trustees appointed by the president could vote, barring other members, including Democrats who hold seats, from decisions. #giftarticle
wapo.st/4bc9F1A
— Flingjore (@flingjore.com) 2026-01-01T22:34:00.317Z
https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/2025/12/31/kennedy-center-board-trustees-bylaws
The Kennedy Center adopted bylaws earlier this year that limited voting to presidentially appointed trustees, a move that preceded a unanimous decision this month by board members installed by President Donald Trump to add his name to the center.
The current bylaws, obtained by The Washington Post, were revised in May to specify that board members designated by Congress known as ex officio members could not vote or count toward a quorum. Legal experts say the move may conflict with the institutions charter.
Trump took over the Kennedy Center in February, purging its board of members he had not appointed. The months that followed saw struggling ticket sales and programming changes that began to align the arts complex with the Trump administrations broader cultural aims, culminating with the annual Kennedy Center Honors hosted by the president.
Days later, on Dec. 18, the board voted to add the presidents name to the institution, and within 24 hours it was on the website and the building itself: The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts.....
The federal law that established the Kennedy Center designates specific government and federal positions including the librarian of Congress; the mayor of Washington, D.C.; the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; and the majority and minority leaders of the Senate to serve as ex officio members.
The law identifies them as part of the board of trustees, which it directs to maintain and administer the facility as a living memorial. But it does not distinguish between voting and nonvoting members, which has been a point of ambiguity in the days following the vote to rename the Kennedy Center......
Beatty, who sued the Kennedy Centers board of trustees Dec. 22 to stop it from adding Trumps name to the institution, declined to comment for this story. But her lawsuit argues the centers statute makes her a a full voting member.......
Roger Colinvaux, a law professor at Catholic University, said his read of the statue establishing the center was not quite as demonstrative as Beattys, but Id argue that the statute does not differentiate among types of trustees in terms of powers and obligations, which would include voting.
Colinvaux added that basic governance principles do not allow for the muting of members of an entitys governing body, which is a deliberative body.
I am a corporate attorney and you cannot change bylaws to make some members non-voting. Beatty's lawsuit will be fun to watch. I will enjoy seeing some corporate law professors getting to testify about corporate law.