US Justice Department Seeks to Lift Injunction on Ballroom Project After Shooting

May 25 (Reuters) – The U.S. Justice Department ⁠has ⁠again asked a federal judge ⁠to lift an injunction holding up progress on ​President Donald Trump’s ballroom project, saying Saturday’s shooting outside the White House showed ‌an urgent need for ‌improved security.

The Justice Department, in a five-page court filing on Sunday, ⁠said the ⁠incident underscores the critical need for “top level, state of the ​art security at the White House, including the ballroom,” adding that it was vital for national security. It also asks for the lawsuit challenging the ​project to be dismissed.

The court filing stated: “This is a terrible, tremendously ⁠harmful ⁠case to the United ⁠States of ​America, and all it stands for!”

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, an appointee ​of former President ⁠George W. Bush sitting in Washington, ruled in April that Trump lacked legal authority to build the ballroom without congressional approval. Leon issued an injunction that halted “above-ground construction of the planned ballroom,” but his order ⁠was quickly put on hold by an appeals court. Construction has ⁠continued.

The DOJ had previously asked Leon to dissolve his injunction and throw out the lawsuit over the ballroom after a foiled attack at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in April. Leon has not acted on that request.

The lawsuit was filed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a congressionally chartered nonprofit organization. It said it would not drop its lawsuit after the attack in ⁠April, despite the Justice Department’s request.

The gunman who fired at a White House checkpoint on Saturday was shot by officers and died after being taken to the hospital on Saturday evening, ​the Secret Service said.

(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston, ​editing by Deepa Babington, Rod Nickel)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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