A sitting American president is considering one of the most sweeping acts of executive clemency in modern history — and the timing could not be more politically charged.
President Donald Trump is actively exploring a plan to issue 250 presidential pardons to commemorate the United States’ 250th birthday, the Wall Street Journal revealed Wednesday, drawing on sourcing from individuals with direct knowledge of the White House discussions.
The number is no accident. It mirrors the nation’s age exactly, tying each pardon symbolically to a single year of American history.
The tradition behind the gesture stretches back centuries.
Monarchs and Catholic popes routinely granted mass clemencies and absolutions during designated “jubilee” years — a practice the current administration appears to be adapting for a democratic republic’s milestone birthday.
Two dates have emerged as frontrunners for a potential announcement.
June 14 carries a triple significance: it is Flag Day on the American calendar, it is the President’s own birthday, and the White House has already scheduled a UFC fight on the South Lawn for that same evening.
The Fourth of July stands as the other option, lining up the pardons directly with Independence Day fireworks.
Despite the fanfare surrounding the concept, a White House official pumped the brakes when the Daily Mail sought comment.
“While there are always ongoing policy conversations about how to best act on the President’s priorities, no decisions have been made nor has any action been taken,” the official stated. “President Trump is the ultimate decider on any clemency-related actions.”
Behind closed doors, the mood is reportedly less settled.
Sources told the Journal that officials inside the White House have begun raising red flags about the political optics of a mass pardon event dropping in a midterm election year — one in which Republicans are scrambling to protect razor-thin majorities in both chambers of Congress.
Trump’s pardon record already stands apart from his predecessors.
Since returning to the Oval Office in January 2025, the President has granted clemency to roughly 1,700 people — a figure that dwarfs former President Joe Biden’s total of 80 full pardons, though Biden separately commuted the sentences of more than 4,100 individuals.
The President’s clemency actions in his second term opened with a sweeping order pardoning defendants tied to the January 6, 2021, Capitol breach. Subsequent pardons reached into unexpected corners — reality television stars Todd and Julie Chrisley walked out of prison, and former Republican Congressman George Santos received a sentence commutation.
Public opinion has taken notice. A poll conducted in December 2025 by the Economist and YouGov found majority support among Americans for the view that Trump has leaned on the pardon power too heavily.
The numbers grew more pointed among independent voters — 61 percent of that bloc stated the President had already handed out too many pardons.
Trump has given no indication he intends to slow down. The mass pardon proposal sits alongside a roster of other America250 initiatives the President has championed, brushing aside critics at every turn.
Workers have already begun altering the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall, painting its base what the President described as “American flag blue.”
The Cultural Landscape Foundation responded this week by filing a lawsuit to halt the project.
A 250-foot-plus triumphal arch — which observers have taken to calling the “Arc de Trump” — is also in the pipeline as a commemorative landmark.
The Federal Aviation Administration confirmed Tuesday it has opened a formal review to assess whether the planned structure, situated less than two miles from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, presents a flight hazard to aircraft operating in the area, CNN reported.
The President’s vision for the semiquincentennial further includes a National Garden of American Heroes featuring 250 statues, a Washington-based IndyCar race branded the Freedom 250 Grand Prix scheduled for August, and the already-planned South Lawn UFC event next month.
