Donald Trump Leads UFC Freedom 250 at White House on 80th Birthday — Tva Nouvelle

Donald Trump Leads UFC Freedom 250 at White House on 80th Birthday — Tva Nouvelle

Donald Trump appeared at UFC Freedom 250 on the south lawn of the White House on the evening of his 80th birthday, with tva nouvelle unfolding before more than 4,000 supporters on the grounds and tens of thousands of combat-sports fans in central Washington. The event paired an octagon, an air show and a presidential appearance in a setting that drew fighters, invited guests and spectators to the White House.

White House south lawn

Trump exited the Oval Office first and walked toward the octagon with Dana White, the UFC’s chief, during the gala. The same evening, Trump and White walked to the Blue Room balcony as fighters from around the world entered the octagon below them.

Freedom 250 took its name from the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence, and the scale of the gathering matched the label. More than 4,000 supporters were on the south lawn, including Mark Zuckerberg and David Ellison, while the broader event brought tens of thousands of combat-sports fans into central Washington.

Thunderbirds over Washington

The gala also featured an aerial display over Washington, with the Thunderbirds taking part and the Blue Angels of the Navy and the Air Force Thunderbirds flying over the site. Zac Brown sang the national anthem before the fights began, adding a stage-show element to a program already far beyond a standard arena card.

Among the marquee guests, Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta, was listed on the invitation roster. Bruce Buffer was present as well, and at least 14 fighters took part in the UFC Freedom 250 gala on the White House grounds.

Sean O’Malley wins

Sean O’Malley beat the Quebec fighter Aiemann Zahabi during the evening’s bouts, giving the card a clear sporting result inside an event built as much around spectacle as competition. Michael Chandler was among the fighters named in the story, alongside the wider field that entered the octagon from around the world.

The unusual part was not just the venue but the setting around it: an event described as long on the margins of mainstream acceptance landed directly on the White House south lawn. The combat card, the guest list and the flyovers made the night a political and cultural display as much as a fight gala, and the next question for readers is how often a presidential backdrop can be used for a sports spectacle of this scale again.

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