US President Donald Trump has only been back in office for a few days, but there are already plans to immortalize his face on the famous Mount Rushmore.
U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) has filed legislation that would direct the secretary of the Interior to carve the figure of President Donald Trump on Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota.
A Florida Republican has introduced legislation to add Donald Trump's face to Mount Rushmore, arguing that his leadership and legacy deserve to be immortalized alongside George Washington, Thomas Jefferson,
A Florida Republican has introduced legislation to add Donald Trump 's face to Mount Rushmore, arguing that his leadership and legacy deserve to be immortalized alongside George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. Discussions about adding Trump to Mount Rushmore date back to his first term in office.
Representative Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) has introduced legislation to add a carving of President Donald Trump to Mount Rushmore in Keystone, South Dakota, sayin
Thomas Jefferson did not use a Bible. Theodore Roosevelt did not use any book during his first swearing-in following William McKinley's assassination. Calvin Coolidge, in keeping with his Puritan roots, did not use a Bible, although one was nearby.
U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna went viral. The outspoken Florida conservative posted to X that she had filed a bill directing the federal government to add President Donald Trump to Mount Rushmore, garnering thousands of responses and re-posts.
If there’s room up there, I think it’d be great,” Trump loyalists on Fox News chimed in after Rep. Anna Paulina Luna wrote, "Let's get carving!”
From the column: "Some Hermantown residents live on Truman Drive ... or McKinley Drive, while Duluth residents enjoy Lincoln Park. There are remembrances of presidents everywhere."
A bill introduced in the U.S. House aims to carve President Donald Trump's face on Mount Rushmore, but faces potential roadblocks.
It's something that's been bandied about for years, but now it could become a reality, thanks to a new bill in Congress.
The Interior Department would be in charge of undertaking Trump’s addition to the South Dakota landmark if approved by Congress.