NEED TO KNOW
- Six Democratic-led states decline Trump's Great American State Fair, citing costs
- Organizers say all 56 states and territories will be represented regardless
- Illinois said no; a Peoria museum will fly the state's flag anyway
WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — Six states have told the Great American State Fair they aren't coming, and the fair's organizers have a ready answer: every state will be represented anyway, with or without its government's consent.
The big picture: The fair is the centerpiece of Freedom 250's semiquincentennial programming on the National Mall, opening June 25 for a 16-day run and already bruised by an exodus of booked musical acts.
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- Freedom 250 stepped in after the official America 250 commission opted against large-scale national events, reaching out to all governors on February 2
- President Trump will open the fair himself with what he called "A Rally to end all Rallies!" after the original concert lineup collapsed in public
Why it matters: A national birthday has become a test of who speaks for a state: its elected government or whoever accepts the invitation.
- Participating states must build and staff a 600-square-foot booth for weeks, at a cost reaching into the hundreds of thousands
- When Illinois declined, organizers tapped the Peoria Riverfront Museum to represent the state instead
Driving the news: Every state that has said no is led by a Democrat, and none of them said it's about Trump.
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- Connecticut, Oregon, Illinois, Washington, and North Carolina are among the six confirmed declines, with at least three states, including Pennsylvania, still undecided
- Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek was the only one to also point to the event's partisan character
What they're saying: The states and the organizers can't even agree on who is paying whom.
- Maura Healey, Massachusetts governor — "This guy finds a way to try to get money into his own pocket any which way"
- Cathryn Vaulman, communications director for Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont — "The federal government has asked states to foot the bill to participate"
- A Freedom 250 spokesperson, to NOTUS — "Freedom 250 is not charging states to participate"
- Michele Walker, North Carolina cultural affairs official — "Our limited resources are focused on America 250 events across North Carolina"
Yes, but: The steamroll narrative has holes the declining states would rather not discuss.
- No state cited politics in its official statement, and the cost claims are concrete: North Carolina is running its own July 4 festival in Raleigh with the money
- Healey's claim that Trump is charging states is directly disputed by organizers; states pay for their own booths, not a fee
- Only Democratic-led states found the price too high, a pattern the cost explanation never addresses
Between the lines: The fair's design makes refusal impossible, which makes participation meaningless as a signal.
- "All 56 represented" is guaranteed by structure, not consent: decline, and the organizers simply redefine who counts as your state. The unanimous map was never in doubt.
- Both sides get the story they want — the White House gets every flag on the Mall, and governors get a budget-based no that reads as principle to their base. Nobody has to own a political choice.
What's next:
- The fair opens June 25 on the National Mall, running through the July 4 anniversary
- Pennsylvania and at least two other states remain on the fence; no Republican-led state has declined
- Watch whether stand-in institutions in declining states face pressure at home for accepting
If a state government says no but a hometown museum says yes, who actually speaks for the state at the nation's birthday — and would your answer flip if the parties were reversed?
Sources
This report was compiled using reporting from Deseret News, CNN, NOTUS, The Hill, Newsweek, Rolling Stone, KESQ, Yahoo News, The Independent, and America250
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