The Octagon during a lighting and pyrotechnic test ahead of a scheduled UFC bout on the South Lawn of the White House on Saturday, June 13, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Donald Trump’s Ultimate Fighting Championship event will be held on the White House grounds as scheduled.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
President Donald Trump celebrated his 80th birthday on Sunday with a once-incredible birthday celebration. It was a cage fight show on the famous South Lawn of the White House.
This week, the harsh reality of the office threatens to overshadow the extravagant UFC mixed martial arts extravaganza in which fighters holed up inside a chain-link octagon punch, kick, chop and punch each other into submission.
President Trump found himself embroiled in an unpopular and costly war that he helped start in Iran. A deal to end the conflict may be close, but key details are still up for negotiation. Meanwhile, about a mile away from President Trump’s birthday celebration, crews stripped the president’s name from the Kennedy Center after a judge ruled that it should be named after Trump’s excesses.
Either way, the president will exit the White House and be surrounded by Cabinet members, senior administration officials, Republican lawmakers and more than 4,000 screaming spectators in a makeshift arena beneath The Crow, a spaceship-like metal arch equipped with lights, sound equipment and a large screen. Thousands more will watch on the big screen from the nearby Ellipse.
“This event is a one-time event and it’s an incredible event. I love it,” UFC chief Dana White, a close friend of the president, said during a hype session Friday night at the Lincoln Memorial. There, under Honest Abe’s marble-stoic gaze, pairs of martial artists jostled and brawled for the camera.
The president is trying to connect Sunday’s event, which will see seven games played past midnight, with a massive months-long celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
A structure known as “The Claw” is seen on the South Lawn of the White House during a media preview for an upcoming UFC bout hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump as part of the United States’ 250th anniversary, June 11, 2026 in Washington, DC.
Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images
But it’s far more about self-congratulations, so much so that the Group of Seven summit of industrialized world leaders postponed the meeting so the president could attend a cage match party and then fly directly to France for talks.
However, the weather can have a big impact on the situation. Strong thunderstorms and severe lightning disrupted Friday’s event at the Lincoln Memorial, and Sunday night’s forecast also looks dangerous.
“I’m tired of hearing about the weather,” White declared Friday, admitting that he wants to hold future UFC events only inside arenas.
Dramatic change from how Biden celebrated his 80th year
When President Trump’s predecessor, President Joe Biden, turned 80 in November 2022, he celebrated with a private family brunch at the White House, making it clear how much and how quickly things have changed.
Asked about the contrast, White House press secretary Alison Schuster said the fight was “going to be one of the most entertaining nights in American history” and that the timing was right. “It is a fitting tribute that this spectacle takes place in our nation’s home on Flag Day as we celebrate our nation’s 500th anniversary,” Schuster said in a statement.
At 80, Mr. Biden is the oldest president in U.S. history and was just months away from running for re-election, but ultimately abandoned his bid after a disastrous debate against Mr. Trump and a revolt among Democrats worried that Mr. Biden was too old to serve a second term.
Mr. Trump replaced Mr. Biden as the oldest person to be elected president of the United States. Although he is prohibited by the constitution from running for office again, he has constantly toyed with the idea in public. It’s a reminder of the concerns Biden faced when he turned 80, even as polls show growing public skepticism about President Trump’s physical and mental health.
A Washington Post/ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted in April found fewer than half of American adults believe Mr. Trump has the mental acuity and physical health to be effective as president.
The White House responded with a lengthy statement from Rep. Ronnie Jackson, R-Texas, Trump’s former physician, saying the president’s “stamina, focus and strength are extraordinary and are demonstrated every day. Any claims to the contrary are completely fictional.” Jackson added that concerns about the polls are being “propagated by an equally biased, liberal, Trump-hating news organization that completely ignores the absolute cognitive and physical disaster that is President Biden.”
Despite this, President Trump has undergone four public health exams this term alone, and White House physician Dr. Sean Barbavera recently declared the president to be in “excellent health.”
“Bread and Circuses” — Trump style
The UFC event is an apt metaphor for President Trump’s punitive political style. He’s as big a fan of cage match style politics as he is of cage fighting itself.
Motorsports athletes and stunt performers jump on motorcycles during the UFC Freedom 250 Fan Fest on Saturday, June 13, 2026 at the White House Oval in Washington, DC. President Donald Trump’s Ultimate Fighting Championship event will be held on the White House grounds as scheduled.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
But Trump has also long been a master of political misdirection, deliberately giving people something to focus on other than the presidency when things aren’t going well.
With the Iran war intensifying despite President Trump’s weeks-long assurances that an end is near, gas prices remaining high, renewed concerns about inflation and President Trump’s job approval ratings plummeting, a White House birthday party unlike any the United States has ever seen is certainly a distraction.
“This is all a diversion,” said Mike Fontaine, a classics professor at Cornell University, who likened it to gladiator games during imperial Rome, where combatants brutalized each other for public entertainment aimed at boosting the ruler’s popularity and quelling potential unrest.
“This is a classic strategy,” Fontaine said. “In ancient Rome, the word would have been ‘bread and circuses.'”
Trump said the event was paid for by the UFC, and while the full amount was not disclosed, the National Park Service said in a court filing that more than $60 million and tens of thousands of hours of effort were spent on the event, with seven government agencies “allocating significant resources and personnel.”
The UFC on Friday also announced the addition of World Liberty Financial as an official partner of the event and a special $250,000 athlete bonus pool for Sunday night’s winners. The cryptocurrency company is co-owned by the Trump family, co-founded with the president’s foreign envoy Steve Witkoff, and run by his son Zack. The deal further blurs the line between the Trump family’s economic interests and the events and construction projects the president has prioritized and used government resources to implement.
Still, Fontaine said that when it comes to his personal flair for showmanship, the president’s second term leans toward “hard-core masculinity and brutal fighting,” blending the blood sports of the UFC with Trump’s trademark sense of humor and timeless showmanship.
“President Trump has a once-in-a-generation talent in this area,” he said.
