Will Commanders obey Trump command on name?



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Trump threatens Commanders regarding name change Image: District of Columbia

The President of the United States, Donald Trump, has long flexed the power of the White House to insert himself into unconventional areas – from the type of sugar in Coca-Cola to renaming the Gulf of Mexico (oceanic basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean mostly surrounded by the North American continent).

‘USA TODAY’ stated that yet, Trump appears to have limited options to carry out his new threat to block the National Football League (NFL) team Washington Commanders’ stadium deal proposed for the District of Columbia.

To truly jeopardize the project the President would probably have to get creative.

In a latest development, the Washington, D.C., City Council Chairman announced recently that a deal has been reached between the City and the Washington Commanders on an amended stadium agreement despite threats earlier from President Trump to block any deal.

The NFL team is in negotiations with the district over their plans to build a new stadium at the RFK Stadium site in D.C. 30 years after decamping to Maryland but the proposal faces myriad challenges up ahead.

The Council is set to vote on the proposal on August 1st with a second vote set for September 17th.

The Washington Commanders are a professional American football team based in the Washington Metropolitan area (US). The Commanders compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member of the National Football Conference (NFC) East Division. They were earlier known as the Washington Redskins.

The Northwest Stadium is an American football stadium in Landover, Maryland, US, located five miles (eight km) East of Washington, D.C. It is the home stadium of the Washington Commanders of the National Football League (NFL). From 2004 until 2010 it had the NFL’s largest seating capacity at 91,000 and currently seats 62,000.

Earlier, Trump suggested he might halt the stadium deal ‒ which would have the team return to the site of the now-demolished 45,423-capacity Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in the district ‒ unless the Commanders adopt its former name, the Redskins. The team has played in Landover, Maryland, since 1997.

‘USA TODAY’ further stated that like any other private company, however, the Commanders organization gets to choose its name. Washington retired the name Redskins in July 2020 amid nationwide protests over the race, initially becoming the Washington Football Team for two seasons and then rebranding as the Washington Commanders in 2022.

Trump can’t unilaterally scrap the team’s stadium deal for Washington because the Congress passed a law in December that transferred the ownership of the RFK Stadium site from the National Park Service to the District of Columbia. The $3.7 billion stadium deal, which includes $1.1 billion in local taxpayer funds, is in the hands of the D.C. Council which is nearing a vote on the project.

Averred Ankit Jain, who serves as one of the district’s two elected shadow US Senators, “The President can say what he wants, but the law is clear. D.C. has full power over that site. There are certain conditions that D.C. has to meet ‒ and none of them are, ‘what is the name of the team’.”
 

Ways Trump Could Try to Impede Stadium Deal

Trump called for the Commanders to revert to its original name in a July 20 social media post that also pushed for the Major League Baseball (MLB) team Cleveland Guardians, formerly the Cleveland Indians, to bring back its old name.

Wrote Trump, “There is a big clamoring for this,” adding in a subsequent post that he “may put a restriction on them” if the Commanders keep their name and “won’t make a deal for them to build a stadium in Washington”.

Trump has no role in approving the stadium project. But because of Washington’s unique status as an enclave of the Federal Government the President could potentially find ways to try to impede the deal.

Under the U.S. Constitution the Congress has authority over the district. Although the 1973 District of Columbia Home Rule Act gave the City local governance with an elected Mayor and the City Council the Congress still has a 30-day review of all legislation passed by the D.C. Council and retains authority over the district’s budget.

That arrangement could give Trump an opportunity to rally the Republicans in Congress to block the stadium legislative package during the review period after the deal passes the Council.

Trump has also shown willingness in other political battles to threaten Federal funding from the States, the Cities, the colleges, and the universities to get his way. Would he be willing to do the same to the district over the Commanders’ name issue?

“I don’t think this is a serious threat,” Jain said of Trump’s demand that the Commanders adopt its old name. Instead, Jain suggested that Trump raised the issue as “a distraction” from the backlash the President has faced for his handling of the Government’s files involving the wealthy financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
 

‘No Kidding Around’

The White House insists Trump isn’t kidding around.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told newsmen recently, “The President was serious. As part of the ‘art of the deal,’ part of his negotiating skills, as you know, sports is one of the many passions of this President and he wants to see this team’s name changed.”
 

Tight-lipped

The Commanders have not issued a formal statement on Trump’s remarks. The Commanders General Manager Adam Peters said the team isn’t focused on the stadium situation – “We really just try to focus on what’s going on in here and getting ready for the season.

Since returning to the White House in January Trump has often talked about taking over the governance of the district, a City he has long derided for crime and homelessness.

More than a decade ago Trump had a very different take in 2013 when the then-President Barack Obama said that the Redskins should consider changing the team name to something less offensive.

Trump wrote on Twitter at the time, “The President should not be telling the Washington Redskins to change their name. Our country has far bigger problems! FOCUS on them, not nonsense.”

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