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                                                                                              February 18, 2025

John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts: Recent

Events and Background


Recent Events
On February 7, 2025, the President announced through
social media his intention to terminate an unspecified
number of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts (Kennedy Center) Board of Trustees (Trustees),
including the chairman, and appoint himself as the new
chairman. Subsequently, the Kennedy Center noted that
while it had received no official notification of the intended
changes, it was aware that some trustees had received
termination notices, and that there is nothing in the
Center's statute that would prevent a new administration
from replacing board members although it had not
happened in the past.

On February 12, the newly reconstituted Trustees
reportedly voted to install the President as chair of the
Trustees, terminate the Kennedy Center president, and
appoint a new president responsible for the center's day-to-
day activities.

By statute, the Kennedy Center is a bureau of the
Smithsonian Institution overseen by the Kennedy Center
Trustees. Congress appears to have placed the Kennedy
Center in the Smithsonian as an autonomous entity largely
independent of the Smithsonian Board of Regents, which
oversees and guides most Smithsonian activities. As part of
his duties, the Secretary of the Smithsonian also serves as a
Kennedy  Center trustee.

The Smithsonian's status as nongovernmental and
organizationally separate and distinct from the legislative,
executive, or judicial branches of the national government
may have implications in efforts to change the membership
of the Kennedy Center Trustees in ways that are not
authorized in statute. Other questions might arise if the
President asserts removal authority of a component of the
Smithsonian, when he lacks similar authority over the
broader enterprise. Congress might engage these concerns
through oversight and annual appropriations processes.

See CRS  In Focus IF12718, Smithsonian Institution:
Background, Entities, and Leadership for further
information on Smithsonian organization.

Kennedy Center Background
The Kennedy  Center was originally designated by Congress
as the National Center for Performing Arts in 1958. It was
redesignated as a living memorial to President Kennedy in
1964. Kennedy Center facilities opened to the public in
1971.

The Trustees maintain and administer the memorial in a
facility overlooking the Potomac River in Washington, DC,


where the center presents music, opera, dance, and other
performing arts, and arts education. Established by
Congress as a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution, the
Kennedy  Center operates independently, having been
granted budget authority separate from the Smithsonian's,
and discretion in its decisions relating to performing arts
and management  of affiliated trust funds reviewable only
by the courts.

The Kennedy  Center is funded through appropriations and
revenues primarily generated by the proceeds from various
performances, and contributions. In FY2023, the latest year
for which complete information is available, the Kennedy
Center received approximately $45.38 million in
appropriations to maintain Kennedy Center facilities as a
federal memorial. Performances, contributions, and other
sources generated approximately $266 million.

Board  of Trustees
The Kennedy  Center Board of Trustees is authorized by
Congress to be composed of specific officials and 36
general trustees appointed by the President. Specified
statutory board members include the

*  Secretaries of Health and Human Services, State, and
   Education;

*  Librarian of Congress;

*  Chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts;

*  Mayor  of the District of Columbia;

*  Superintendent of Schools of the District of Columbia;

*  Director of the National Park Service;

*  Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution;

*  Speaker and the minority leader of the House of
   Representatives;

*  chair and ranking minority member of the House
   Committee  on Transportation and Infrastructure;

*  three additional Members of the House, appointed by
   the Speaker;

*  majority leader and the minority leader of the Senate;

*  chair and ranking minority member of the Senate
   Committee  on Environment and Public Works: and

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