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Norms Impact

Trump administration terminates lease for Washington’s 3 public golf courses

Ending a long-term lease for public golf on federal land hands the White House a direct lever over prized park assets, inviting political capture of civic space.

Executive

Dec 31, 2025

Sources

Summary

The Department of the Interior terminated the National Links Trust’s 50-year lease to operate Washington’s three public golf courses on federal land. The termination shifts control of high-profile federal parkland recreation sites back to the executive branch. The decision opens the door for President Donald Trump to reshape these public courses, including sites along the Potomac River, in Rock Creek Park, and one tied to Black golf history.

Reality Check

This kind of executive intervention in federal-land leasing is a blueprint for politicizing public assets—once agencies can abruptly pull long-term agreements, every community program becomes conditional on who holds power. On these facts alone, it is not clearly criminal; lease termination for asserted noncompliance is typically an administrative act, not a federal offense. The democratic danger is the precedent of using federal property control to imprint a president’s personal brand and preferences on public resources, weakening neutral stewardship and the public’s equal claim to shared land.

Detail

<p>The Department of the Interior terminated the National Links Trust’s lease agreement to operate three public golf courses in Washington that sit on federal land.</p><p>The nonprofit said it received notice Wednesday that Interior ended the 50-year lease under which it had operated the courses for the past five years. Interior stated the termination was based on the nonprofit’s failure to implement required capital improvements and to meet lease terms.</p><p>Future plans for the courses were not announced. The action affects courses overlooking the Potomac River, a course in Rock Creek Park, and a site described as part of Black golf history. The termination shifts immediate control over the leases and next steps to the federal government.</p>