US President Donald Trump will headline an event commemorating the nation’s 250th anniversary on the National Mall next month after several musical performers scheduled to appear in the celebration cancelled, citing concerns about its association with him, organisers told the Washington Post.
The concerts were planned as the opening ceremony of the Great American State Fair, a 16-day event running from June 25 to July 10. Organisers said the fair, organised by the Freedom 250 group, would stretch on the National Mall from the US Capitol to the Washington Monument, with concert stages, state pavilions, exhibits, rides, and other attractions.
But the musical lineup has been hit by a series of cancellations. On Friday, Bret Michaels, the lead singer of the rock band Poison, became the fifth performer to withdraw from the concerts, saying that the event was not the nonpartisan celebration that he thought it would be.
Organisers have not publicly detailed the reasons for the departures, though the exits have raised questions about the viability of the event as originally envisioned.
Danielle Alvarez, an adviser to Freedom 250, told the Post that “Trump will personally kick off this historic celebration on June 24 in an opening ceremony celebrating America’s 250th birthday.”
The Freedom 250 group did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. In a post on Truth Social earlier yesterday, Trump suggested the concert series may no longer be necessary if performers continue to back out. He floated the possibility of giving a speech on the National Mall instead, portraying himself as a more powerful draw than any musical act.
“The fact is that I am, according to many, the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World,” Trump wrote. He added that he gets “much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime” and “does so without a guitar.”