*
Tuesday: 31 March 2026
  • 31 March 2026
  • 16:43
Golden Statue and Airplane Trump Reveals Features of His Presidential Library

Khaberni - American President Donald Trump has revealed the preliminary designs for the "Presidential Library" project, which this time takes the form of a giant glass skyscraper that is planned to be built in Miami, Florida, a step his son Eric described as "a lasting testament to the greatest president the nation has known."

Trump broadcasted on his platform "Truth Social" a video outlining the features of the project, including a spacious lobby designed as an aviation museum featuring a presidential airplane of the model "Boeing 747-8" (gifted by Qatar and valued at 400 million dollars), along with fighter jets and military helicopters.

The footage showed a luxurious golden entrance topped by a huge statue of Trump raising his fist in the air, in addition to replicas of the Oval Office and the White House's grand ballroom, with the name "Trump" in giant letters at the top of the tower.

According to "The Times," this announcement coincided with supportive political moves in Florida, where Governor Ron DeSantis signed a law renaming "Palm Beach International Airport" to "President Donald J. Trump International Airport."

The state had previously agreed to transfer property in central Miami, valued at $67 million, to the benefit of the Presidential Library Foundation.

Investigations into "suspicious funding"
Meanwhile, Democratic members of Congress have launched an extensive investigation into the funding sources of the project. The investigations focus on a sum of 63 million dollars pledged by major technology and media companies like "Meta," "Paramount," and "X" as part of legal settlements related to restricting Trump's accounts or distorting his image in previous coverages.

Legislators, led by Senator Elizabeth Warren, expressed their concerns about "corruption suspicions," especially after the financial fund designated for the project was dissolved last September for failing to submit the mandatory annual reports, raising questions about the fate of those millions and the transparency of donations that might affect public policy without clear federal oversight.

Topics you may like