US 250th Birthday Celebration Falters in Washington as 7,600-Person Seward Keeps Traditions
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 4
US 250th Birthday Celebration Falters in Washington as 7,600-Person Seward Keeps Traditions
2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 4
Summary
Washington’s official 250th anniversary celebration entered July 4 under strain, with organizers facing political acrimony, algae in the Reflecting Pool and performer withdrawals.
Bret Michaels and other acts pulled out because they feared President Trump had made the event too partisan, underscoring how the capital’s plans became entangled in national politics.
Outside Washington, thousands of local Independence Day events were set to proceed largely unchanged, following familiar community routines rather than the capital’s fraught script.
Seward, Nebraska — population 7,600 — planned a VFW breakfast, a 10:30 a.m. pie-eating contest and a parade featuring tractors and combines, illustrating a more traditional version of the holiday.
The split scene captured the country’s 250th year as both a milestone celebration and a reflection of a deeply polarized political moment.