Judge denies request to lift Kennedy Center ruling ordering Trump's name removed

There is still a deadline of Friday to remove Trump’s name from the building.

A federal judge on Friday denied the Department of Justice's request to lift an order requiring the removal of President Donald Trump's name from the Kennedy Center.

The Trump administration still faces a deadline of Friday to remove Trump's name from the building. As of Friday afternoon, construction crews surround the part of the Kennedy Center bearing Trump's name, assembling scaffolding to assist in the name removal.

Trump's name has already been removed from the Kennedy Center's website and YouTube page.

U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper said the Trump administration failed to show how they would be "irreparably injured absent a stay."

Judge Cooper also noted that the Trump administration's earlier steps to remove Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center's website "undermine the notion that Defendants face irreparable harm in complying with the order in full."

"What's more, issuance of a stay pending appeal would not be in the public interest, which is rarely served by the 'perpetuation' of 'unlawful' governmental action," he wrote.

On Thursday, less than a day before a court-ordered deadline to remove Trump's name from the Kennedy Center, the DOJ filed a notice of appeal to challenge the ruling that found his attempt to rename and close the performing arts center for lengthy renovations was illegal.

Two weeks ago, Cooper gave the Trump administration 14 days to remove references to the "Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts" and "Trump Kennedy Center" from the building and grounds, as well the center's website.

On social media following the ruling, Trump appeared to back away from his planned renovation of the center, saying in a social media post, "Unless I am free to do what I do better than anyone else, bring this Institution back, physically, financially, and artistically, I have no interest in continuing what could only be a hopeless journey into "NEVER NEVER LAND."

In his May decision, Judge Cooper ruled that the rebranding of the Kennedy Center as the "Trump Kennedy Center" violated the law, writing, "Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it."

The judge also said the Kennedy Center Board made an "ill-informed" and "seemingly preordained" decision to close the center for two years starting in July for major renovations.

Congress created the famed cultural institution in a federal statute, designating it as a living memorial in 1964 shortly after President John F. Kennedy's death.

The lawsuit that led to the judge's order was brought by Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty, who sits on the Kennedy Board of Trustees as one of its ex-officio members.

Earlier Friday, lawyers for Beatty urged Cooper to deny what she described as the Trump administration’s "latest gambit" to lift the ruling "at nearly the last possible moment."