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President Trump on Friday shared a new rendering of a limited-edition “Patriot Passport” featuring his image for America’s 250th anniversary.
A sample image shared on the president’s social media depicts Trump standing with his fists on the Resolute Desk and the text of the Declaration of Independence in the background. The second page includes an image of John Trumbell’s iconic “The Declaration of Independence” painting.
“The U.S.A.’s New Passport, which says, ‘Welcome, but be good!’” Trump wrote in the Truth Social post.
The State Department teased these special anniversary documents in April, sharing a previous version of this document on social media.
The White House’s official social media account reposted the version shared by the president on Friday, adding the caption, “PATRIOT PASSPORT.”
This limited-edition document is part of a larger push from the president and his administration to insert Trump’s name or his likeness to federal buildings, online services, battleships and more.
The Trump administration’s efforts to add the president’s name to the Kennedy Center has been the subject of a legal challenge, with a judge ordering the administration to remove Trump’s name from the iconic performing arts center’s facade.
The letters have since been removed, but the Kennedy Center’s board continues to push for the renaming and to shut down the center for renovations this summer.
The Trump administration was also sued last year over a proposed all-access national parks pass that replaced an image of Glacier National Park in Montana with a picture of Trump and former President George Washington.
The executive director for the Center of Biological Diversity, which brought this lawsuit, called the move “Trump’s crassest, most ego-driven action yet.”
“It’s disgusting of Trump to politicize America’s most sacred refuge by pasting his face over the national parks in the same way he slaps his corporate name on buildings, restaurants, and golf courses,” Kierán Suckling said in a statement at the time. “The national parks are not a personal branding opportunity. They’re the pride and joy of the American people.”
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