
America’s 250th birthday marked by rival events and deep national pessimism
A split between a Trump-aligned celebration in Washington and a nonpartisan event in Los Angeles reflects widespread gloom, with one in five Americans refusing to celebrate.
The United States’ semiquincentennial on 4 July is unfolding as two separate, federally linked commemorations that barely acknowledge each other, after the White House created a parallel organising body that sidelined the congressionally chartered America250 commission. According to internal documents and officials cited by Time, the White House’s Freedom 250 group took over programming in Washington, replacing a planned Smithsonian cultural festival and a diverse parade with a Great American State Fair and a Trump rally on the National Mall. America250, which had spent years planning nonpartisan events, deferred the capital’s events to the White House and is instead staging a concert in Los Angeles hosted by Queen Latifah. The two groups ran competing Super Bowl advertisements and student contests, and behind closed doors grievances simmer over budgets and branding, though both publicly deny any rivalry.
Polling by Reuters/Ipsos, reported by The Independent, shows that one in five Americans will not mark Independence Day this year, including a quarter of Democrats, and two in five doubt the nation can endure another 250 years. In Bucks County, Pennsylvania, a swing region that Donald Trump won by fewer than 300 votes in 2024, residents described a celebration that feels inseparable from partisan identity. A retired teacher said she could not join a party with people enthusiastic about the country’s direction, while a Republican laundromat owner planned to celebrate what he sees as a thriving America. NBC News found that many Americans now view the Stars and Stripes itself as a polarised symbol, with some displaying it out of pride and others feeling social pressure to avoid being seen as unpatriotic.
Viewed from outside the United States, the nostalgia for a fairer past is challenged. In Australia, commentators writing in The Sydney Morning Herald argue that the US was never equitable, pointing to systemic disparities based on race, class and gender, and that the current dysfunction is an extension of long-standing inequities rather than a departure from some golden age. This perspective aligns with data cited by Vox showing that by objective measures—life expectancy, infant mortality, crime rates—the country is markedly better off than during the euphoric bicentennial of 1976, yet public optimism has collapsed. In 1976, Americans were optimistic about the future by a three-to-one margin; today, roughly three-quarters believe the founders would be disappointed, and a majority say the nation’s best years are behind it.
The split commemoration has produced tangible consequences. At least nine Democratic-led states declined to staff booths at the Great American State Fair, and multiple musical acts cancelled appearances, stating they had been misled into believing the event was part of the nonpartisan America250 effort. Attendance at the fair has been sparse, with images showing largely empty tents and a power failure that melted ice cream in a food hall. President Trump, posting on Truth Social, claimed a “fantastic job” and a packed crowd, though video evidence contradicted his assertion of 45,000 attendees. The US Mint is proceeding with a 250th commemorative gold coin bearing Trump’s likeness. The fair is scheduled to run until 10 July, with Trump’s rally on the National Mall set for the evening of 4 July, while the Los Angeles concert proceeds as a separate, parallel celebration.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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America's 250th birthday is overshadowed by deep national pessimism and political division, with rival celebrations on opposite coasts and millions refusing to participate. The flag itself has become a partisan symbol, and Trump's grandiose rally on the National Mall is marred by low turnout and logistical failures. Despite economic data showing improvement since 1976, a pervasive sense of unfairness and greed dominates the public mood.
The United States marks its 250th anniversary with a record-breaking fireworks display and a festival bearing Trump's personal imprint, including commemorative coins and passports. Critics denounce the enormous cost and environmental impact, but the president remains undeterred, promising the most spectacular birthday party ever.
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