A group of House Democrats will ntroduce legislation aimed at stopping President Donald Trump’s proposed triumphal arch near Arlington National Cemetery, opening a new front in the growing battle over the administration’s efforts to reshape some of the nation’s most visible public monuments.

Representatives Don Beyer (D-Va.) and Dina Titus (D-Nev.) announced this week that they will introduce the Arlington National Cemetery Viewshed Protection Act, which would explicitly prohibit construction of the proposed arch and bar the use of federal funds for the project. The legislation follows a recent vote by Trump appointees on the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts approving designs for the monument. 

The Trump administration has argued that the arch would serve as a commemorative structure tied to celebrations marking the 250th anniversary of the United States. Critics, however, contend that the project violates the Commemorative Works Act, which generally requires congressional approval for new memorials on federal land in and around Washington, D.C. 

Under the proposed legislation, construction of a triumphal arch would be prohibited within Lady Bird Johnson Park, the narrow stretch of National Park Service land between Arlington National Cemetery and the Potomac River. The bill would also permanently bar federal funding for such a project and prevent similar non-congressionally approved structures elsewhere within the National Capital Region. 

“Arlington National Cemetery is sacred ground,” Beyer said in a statement announcing the measure, calling the proposal “a monument to Donald Trump’s ego.” 

The legislation arrives as the administration faces mounting scrutiny over another high-profile monument project: the controversial renovation of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. Earlier this week, newly obtained federal documents revealed that the no-bid contract awarded to repaint the basin bright blue ballooned from Trump’s initial estimate of less than $2 million to roughly $13.1 million. Internal government reviews reportedly described the contractor’s profit margin as “inflated,” while records showed workers struggled to fix the leaks the project was intended to address. 

The reflecting pool project has already drawn a lawsuit from the Cultural Landscape Foundation, which alleges that federal officials improperly bypassed historic-preservation reviews in order to complete the work ahead of the nation’s semiquincentennial celebrations in 2027. The administration has defended the project as necessary maintenance on a long-troubled landmark. 

Put them together, the two disputes underscore how Trump’s “Safe and Beautiful” campaign has transformed questions of monument design and preservation into increasingly political fights, with critics accusing the administration of sidestepping long-established review processes while supporters argue the projects represent overdue investments in some of the country’s most recognizable civic spaces.

The bill is expected to be formally introduced during a pro forma House session on Friday and has already attracted more than two dozen Democratic cosponsors.

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