Before the first punch, Trumpβs White House UFC event faces blowback

WASHINGTON, June 5 β Long before the first punch lands at President Donald Trumpβs unprecedented hosting of a UFC fight on the White House lawn, some in the usually ultra-pro-Trump mixed martial arts community are already throwing political blows.
The June 14th event should be ultimate safe territory for the Republican, who will celebrate his 80th birthday that day.
Trump has close ties with the violent, popular sportβs leaders and many of its leading fighters are open supporters.
But jarring tensions are emerging in the run-up to UFC Freedom 250, the event being held in a specially built arena erected over the White Houseβs elegant South Lawn.
βOddβΒ
Joe Rogan, Americaβs top podcaster and a key voice in the UFC world, told his huge audience on May 27 that he found the idea of making top athletes fight outdoors in the June heat βodd.β
βI donβt like it,β he said.
UFC chief and Trump ally Dana White has cited Washingtonβs infamous insect population as a potential problem for the open-air fights.
Beyond logistical challenges are deeper questions about spending a reported $60 million on a bloody spectacle outside the revered home of the US presidency while Trump is embroiled in war with Iran and polls show Americans deeply discontented over the economy.
In March, Rogan said he was excited for the event, but that it was βweird to have a fight at the White Houseβ given the security tensions in wartime.
This week, he softened his earlier comments, saying, βItβs so funny watching people lose their mind over it.β
βI mean, thereβs no more American thing than having a UFC fight on the White House lawn. Itβs so American. Itβs so Trump. Itβs so crazy. You know what I mean? A UFC fight on the White House lawn is bananas,β he added, excitedly.
Outspoken fighter banned?Β
But current UFC middleweight champ Sean Strickland has claimed he was barred from the event for criticizing Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and the war they launched together against Iran, which he says βno Americans agree with.β
βUFCβs higher ups called me β you know big names β and they said, βSean, I gotta apologise, but youβre not Israeli enough to go to UFC 250 Israel Edition. The White House didnβt clear you,ββ Strickland said in an Instagram video post on Wednesday.
Strickland, who has faced strong criticism over repeated racist remarks in the past, supported Trumpβs reelection bid in 2024, but has since distanced himself.
UFC and parent company TKO Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
βRoom for corruptionβΒ
Another UFC fighter, Bryce Mitchell, backed Strickland this week, saying the government was βdesecrating its role in societyβ by staging the fight at the White House.
βThe government should never be hosting sporting events, because thereβs more room for corruption, and we already have a corrupted government,β he added.
Like Strickland, Mitchell supported Trumpβs 2024 bid, but in an April Instagram post he said Trump was βan antichrist,β and said Trump βdestroys our nation and conducts a war that wasnβt voted for.β
He also called the White House event βan egregious misuse of political favour to basically make people worship Donald Trump.β
Mitchell has previously faced strong criticism for homophobic and antisemitic comments, including Holocaust denial.
Twelve fighters are on the card for the event, including American athlete Justin Gaethje who described participating in the event as an βunbelievable honourβ in an Oval Office appearance with Trump on May 6. β AFP