Politics

Michelle Obama Makes Dig at Trump’s East Wing Demolition

R.I.P. EAST WING

The former first lady ran her historic ‘Let’s Move’ campaign out of the demolished building.

Jenna Bush Hager and Michelle Obama.
NBC

Michelle Obama, 61, has mocked President Donald Trump’s demolition of the White House East Wing, which once housed the first lady’s office.

“There’s pressure for every first lady,” she told host Jenna Bush Hager on Tuesday’s Today show. “There’s no guidebook... There’s barely a staff. Now we don’t have a building.”

Bush Hager, 43, the daughter of former President George W. Bush and first lady Laura Bush, laughed along with Obama, saying, “I know, R.I.P. the East Wing.”

Recently, another first daughter, Chelsea Clinton, expressed her feelings on the demolition.

Dr. Chelsea Clinton speaks onstage during the Featured Session "Reproductive Freedom: Good for Workers, Good for Business" during the SXSW Conference & Festivals held at the Austin Convention Center on March 9, 2025 in Austin, Texas.  at Austin Convention Center on March 09, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
Chelsea Clinton expressed her feelings on the demolition. Mat Hayward/WireImage

“What was dismantled today isn’t just marble or plaster; it is a reflection of how easily history can be erased when power forgets purpose,” the daughter of Bill and Hillary Clinton wrote on Oct. 23 in USA Today.

Trump insisted in July that his 90,000 square-foot ballroom construction would not “interfere with the current building.”

An excavator sits on the rubble after the East Wing of the White House was demolished on October 28, 2025 in Washington, DC.
The East Wing of the White House was entirely demolished to make room for Donald Trump’s $300 million ballroom. Alex Wong Getty Images

Since demolition began in October, the White House’s East Wing has been entirely torn down to make way for the president’s $350 million project, which skyrocketed from a $200 million price point in July.

The gilded ballroom will replace the East Wing, where Bush Hager’s mother, Laura, had a historic meeting with the United Nation’s Special Advisor on Burma (now Myanmar) on Dec. 17, 2007, just months after the country’s Saffron Revolution.

Laura Bush: Meeting with Ibrahim Gambari, U.N. Special Advisor on Burma
Laura Bush had a historic meeting with the United Nation’s Special Advisor on Burma (now Myanmar) on Dec. 17, 2007, just months after the country’s Saffron Revolution. Joyce N Boghosian/The White House

Bush also launched her literacy efforts in the building, and Michelle Obama oversaw her “Let’s Move” campaign—a task force focused on childhood obesity.

Obama, the first Black woman to become first lady, commented on her unique experience serving in the role for eight years.

“And I don’t think that other families dealt with that kind of criticism. But as you know, the first lady, it’s a strange job,” she said.

She expanded more on the difficulties in a Monday interview with People.

“As a Black woman, I felt that I had to make sure that people could see my feminine side,” she said. “Especially early on in the campaign, when I was being attacked as being angry, a shrew, demeaning my husband—all these labels were coming in on me that were essentially trying to rob me of that femininity."

Jenna Bush Hager said that “Texas has a type of resilience."
Jenna Bush Hager, 43, is the daughter of former President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush. NBC/Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images

She clarified to Bush Hager that “the light was a little bit brighter because politics created an other-ness” when she was serving as first lady.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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