President Donald Trump’s reported effort to hold a giant infrastructure project hostage unless he gets to rename Washington-Dulles International Airport and New York’s Penn Station after himself, on the surface, seems like yet another of his narcissistic gambits. But taken with all his other efforts at self-commemoration, it should also be seen as something more: an authoritarian tactic to dominate the public’s consciousness.
Since October, Trump has frozen funds for a $16 billion project to create new rail tunnels between New York and New Jersey. His attempted justification was that his administration needed to scrutinize the project and ensure compliance with its purge of “diversity, equity and inclusion” hiring practices. The suspension of funds has already resulted in the loss of some 1,000 construction jobs, and thousands more are in jeopardy.
On Friday night, a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to unblock the funding while the various lawsuits over the project continue. That’s good news for commuters and workers — if the administration complies.
It is standard fare for autocratic leaders to erase boundaries between themselves and the state.
But Punchbowl News reported on Thursday that, in January, Trump told Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., that he would unfreeze the funds if Schumer agreed to rename Dulles Airport and Penn Station in his name. MS NOW has independently confirmed the report. Schumer has no direct oversight over either of those places, and he rejected the demand.
This isn’t normal political dealmaking. It’s an abuse of power. The president is interfering with funds that were already allocated by Congress for an important public works project in order to effectively skim something off the top for himself (even if in this case he’s trying to secure symbolic power, and not money). As my colleague Steve Benen put it, it’s an “attempt at extortion.”
And as Benen detailed, his obsession with renaming things after himself is unrelenting:
Trump and his allies have now applied the president’s name to the Kennedy Center and to the Institute of Peace, announced the construction of ‘Trump-class’ battleships, unveiled a commemorative legal-tender coin that will feature his face on both sides and have launched ‘Trump Gold Cards,’ ‘Trump Accounts’ and ‘TrumpRx’ (the government’s new drug-pricing website). By some accounts, the president wants the forthcoming White House ballroom to be named after him, too.
Presidential historians have pointed out that Trump’s renaming spree is unprecedented; typically a president is commemorated by other people after the president dies.








