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[NH, MA] Bellwether Community Credit Union $300 Checking Bonus


Update 5/9/26: Bonus now $300, but $150 isn’t until account has been open for 12 months. Previously it was $200 total. Hat tip to reader Peek

Offer at a glance

  • Maximum bonus amount: $200
  • Availability: Bellwether membership is open to anyone living or working in New Hampshire and Essex or Middlesex Counties in Massachusetts.
  • Direct deposit required: Yes, two $500+
  • Additional requirements: See below 
  • Hard/soft pull: Unknown 
  • ChexSystems: Unknown
  • Credit card funding: Up to $3,000
  • Monthly fees: None 
  • Early account termination fee: Unknown
  • Household limit: None listed
  • Expiration date: None listed

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Bellwether Community Credit Union is offering a $150 bonus when you open a new checking account and complete the following requirements within 60 days of account opening : 
    • Set up at least $1,000 in qualifying direct deposits within the first 90 days
  • Receive an additional $150 bonus after 12 months when you:
    • Complete at least 10 debit card transactions during the 12-month period
    • Receive at least six (6) direct deposits of $100 or more over 12 months
    • Keep your account in good standing for the full 12 months

The Fine Print

  • Offer valid on new consumer checking accounts only.
  • Not available to existing Bellwether Community Credit Union checking account members or those whose accounts have been closed in good standing within 12 months or closed with a negative balance at any time.
  • Offer not available for account conversions.
  • Offer limited to one $200 cash bonus, per individual taxpayer identification number.
  • Requires two qualifying direct deposits of $500 or more within 60 days of account opening. A qualifying direct deposit is a recurring direct deposit of a paycheck, pension or other regular monthly income (including Social Security) electronically deposited into account per statement cycle. Personal transfers or deposits made at a branch, online or ATM do not qualify.
  • Cash Bonus Offer also requires 10 debit card transactions within 60 days of account opening.
  • Bellwether Community Credit Union will fulfill bonus within 60 days of qualification.
  • Offer may be withdrawn or changed at any time
  • Bellwether membership is open to anyone living or working in New Hampshire and Essex or Middlesex Counties in Massachusetts.
  • All bank account bonuses are treated as income/interest and as such you have to pay taxes on them

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

Live free has no monthly fees to worry about

Early Account Termination Fee

I wasn’t able to find a fee schedule so unsure if there is any EATF

Our Verdict

If anybody goes for this please share your experiences in the comments below. 

Hat tip to reader Gar

Useful posts regarding bank bonuses:

  • A Beginners Guide To Bank Account Bonuses
  • Bank Account Quick Reference Table (Spreadsheet) (very useful for sorting bonuses by different parameters)
  • PSA: Don’t Call The Bank
  • Introduction To ChexSystems
  • Banks & Credit Unions That Are ChexSystems Inquiry Sensitive
  • What Banks & Credit Unions Do/Don’t Pull ChexSystems?
  • How To Use Our Direct Deposit Page For Bank Bonuses Page
  • Common Bank Bonus Misconceptions + Why You Should Give Them A Go
  • How Many Bank Accounts Can I Safely Open Within A Year For Bank Bonus Purposes?
  • Affiliate Links & Bank Bonuses – We Won’t Be Using Them
  • Complete List Of Ways To Close Bank Accounts At Each Bank
  • Banks That Allow/Don’t Allow Out Of State Checking Applications
  • Bank Bonus Posting Times

Loandepot files $250 million shelf registration



Loandepot has filed a $250 million shelf registration, setting up potential future funding for its operations or repayment of debt.

Processing Content

The lender and servicer filed the form with the Securities and Exchange Commission Thursday, two days after it revealed a larger net loss for the first quarter. According to the latest filing, the up to $250 million could also be used for acquisitions, capital expenditures, or other corporate purposes.

The offering could be sold via Class A common stock, debt securities or other financial instruments. Such an offering could also dilute the value of company shares held by current stockholders. Loandepot’s stock was trading around $1.40 per share in the mid-afternoon Friday, and it has wavered slightly in the past week. 

A spokesperson for Loandepot Friday said the company had no comment. 

Loandepot’s financial standing

The Southern California-based giant said it ended the first quarter with $277.4 million in cash and cash equivalents, a 17.7%, or $59.8 million decrease from the end of the fourth quarter. 

The spending occurred in a less-than-stellar period for the company. Loandepot reported a large year-over-year gain in production volume and slight uptick in total market share to around 1.4%. It also however posted continually declining pull-through weighted gain on sale margins, which executives this week blamed on fewer originations of higher-margin government loans and fewer home equity lines of credit. 

At large, the company reports $2.1 billion in debt obligations, which includes mortgage servicing rights facilities. The lender has $340.6 million outstanding on 8.750% senior secured notes which mature next November. It also reports $499.4 million outstanding on 6.125% senior unsecured notes which mature in April 2028. 

Loandepot Chief Financial Officer David Hayes, in response to an analyst on the earnings call earlier this week, said the company is actively mulling strategies to address the debt maturities. 

“The markets are quite turbulent as you well know, right now,” he said. “And so we are trying to be very thoughtful about how we approach that, but we were hoping to have a resolution on that in the coming months.”

A year removed from a long-term pivot, Loandepot continues to gear up in anticipation of a more favorable interest rate environment. The lender announced in March its return to the wholesale space after a three-year hiatus, and it raised its warehouse financing slightly in the recent period.  

The company has also hyped its new partnership with Figure Technology Solutions, suggesting the new speedy 5×5 HomeLoan product will lower production costs.



Law firm Serling Rooks rebrands as McKoy Worob Averill Scott & Koenig LLP, elevates Jeffrey Koenig and adds Margo Scott as named partner


Serling Rooks Hunter McKoy Worob & Averill LLP, the New York-headquartered music and entertainment law firm, has rebranded as McKoy Worob Averill Scott & Koenig LLP.

The change, which took effect in January 2026, follows the departure of named partners Reid Hunter and Joe Serling.

Following the transition, longtime partner Jeffrey Koenig has been elevated to named partner, while Margo Scott, joins as a new named partner.

Three additional partners also join the firm: Atticus George Carroll, who arrives from Warner Records, where she was Vice President of Business & Legal Affairs; plus Anamaria Laguna-Dunn and Kate Glinert, who have both been elevated from Senior Counsel.

The firm’s pre-existing leadership of Mike McKoy, Jeffrey Worob and Craig Averill remains in place.

“Reid Hunter and Joe Serling are both brilliant attorneys, and together we built one of the most esteemed law firms in music and entertainment.”

Mike McKoy

The firm’s current client roster includes Ejae, one of the singer-songwriters who provided the singing voice of Rumi in Sony Pictures Animation and Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters, plus Maroon 5, Maggie Rogers, Leon Bridges, Fall Out Boy, Halsey, LCD Soundsystem, Joji, Magdalena Bay and Rostrum Records.

“Reid Hunter and Joe Serling are both brilliant attorneys, and together we built one of the most esteemed law firms in music and entertainment,” said Mike McKoy.

“Jeff, Craig and I are honored to carry on this mission with Jeffrey Koenig and Margo Scott joining us at the helm, along with partners Atticus George Carroll, Anamaria Laguna-Dunn, and Kate Glinert, and our amazing associates and staff.”

Margo Scott‘s arrival brings more than three decades of major-label experience to the firm. She rose through the ranks of Atlantic Records to Senior Vice President, Business & Legal Affairs & Deputy General Counsel, where, the firm says, she handled business affairs matters relating to Missy Elliott, Coldplay and Maybach Music Group.

She also created the Warner Music Group form agreement, according to the firm.

Scott was later elevated to General Counsel of Elektra Music Group and 300 Entertainment, advising on legal and business matters relating to Gunna, Young Thug, Megan Thee Stallion, Twenty One Pilots, Bailey Zimmerman and Brandi Carlile.

She left 300 Elektra Entertainment in 2024, and since entering private practice in 2025, Scott has built a client list that includes Matchbox Twenty, plus independent companies Artist House, ALTER Music and Big Machine Rock.

Jeffrey Koenig first joined the firm in 2010, after five years in-house at Universal Motown Republic, where he worked on projects including Amy Winehouse and Cash Money Records. Elevated to partner in 2018, Koenig represents clients including Jack Harlow, Mitski, Caamp, Tori Kelly, and Partisan Records.

His clients also include Jamestown Revival (Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance), who wrote the music and lyrics for The Outsiders – the Broadway adaptation of S.E. Hinton‘s novel that won four Tony Awards in 2024, including Best Musical.

The firm’s roster also includes Grammy Award-winning recording artists, Tony Award-winning lyricists, Fortune 500 companies and independent record labels, according to the company.Music Business Worldwide

The Best Under-the-Radar AI Stocks to Buy in 2026


You’re certainly familiar with names like Nvidia and Palantir Technologies. The former remains the world’s chief supplier of artificial intelligence (AI) data center processors, while the latter is one of the most-used decision-intelligence platforms. Both stocks have performed very well of late thanks to AI mania.

The problem with stepping into such well-known names, however, is simply that these trades can be very crowded and therefore very expensive. As Warren Buffett famously advises, “You can’t buy what is popular and do well.” Oh, there are clear exceptions to his argument — both Palantir and Nvidia continued rallying well after both tickers became well-known must-haves. Plenty of investors understandably suspect that these two stocks’ highest-growth phase is in the rearview mirror. Smart investors are looking for the next unknown AI gem that’s yet to be discovered and subsequently fully valued.

To this end, three under-the-radar AI stocks to buy this year before their underlying companies become a more important part of the AI conversation are Dell (DELL +13.06%), ON Semiconductor (ON +2.57%), and Astera Labs (ALAB +2.02%). Here’s why.

Yes, Dell is waist-deep into the AI solutions business

Dell is not only still around as a major brand in the desktop and laptop space, but is also inching into the AI space with a platform called Dell AI Factory.

In simplest terms, Dell AI Factory allows organizations to harness the power of artificial intelligence in a way that’s easy to implement and easy to use… using Dell’s hardware of course (although often paired with Nvidia-made processors). Formula 1 racing team McClaren, energy and chemical outfit Worley, and retailer Lowe’s are just some of the organizations that have been able to do something constructive with otherwise abstract and difficult-to-build AI tech.

Today’s Change

(13.06%) $30.07

Current Price

$260.34

And it’s working! Last fiscal year’s top line grew 19% to a record-breaking $113.5 billion, led by 40% growth from its infrastructure solutions group, which was led by an explosion of sales of its AI-optimized servers. Analysts are looking for comparable top-line and bottom-line growth this year as well. Its practical, turnkey offerings are the option that many companies not interested in piecing together their own AI solution have been waiting for.

Just be careful if you’re interested. While most investors don’t yet think of Dell as a participant in the AI revolution, enough of them have found and plowed into a stake in this $160 billion company to push shares up to a price that’s 30% above Wall Street’s consensus target of $191.21.

Much of this gain has occurred only recently, so analysts may not have had a chance to update their stances. Still, if you can hold out for a slightly better entry point, Dell is one of the stock market’s better-kept AI secrets.

ON Semiconductor makes AI-powered automation possible

Creating a powerful AI platform is one thing. Doing something constructive with it is another. AI still needs a way to convert physical information into digital data and then do something mechanically useful with its computed information.

ON Semiconductor is quietly bridging that gap.

Simply put, ON makes a range of industrial sensors, wireless antennas, and microcontrollers, along with power controllers, high-capacity semiconductors, and motor controllers that are used in everything from driver-assistance tech to medical diagnostic equipment to factories to wearables, and more. The company’s current developmental partners include electric vehicle (EV) makers Geely and Nio, but it’s also working with China’s Sineng Electric on energy-storage solutions. It’s even partnered with Nvidia to develop new 800-volt power solutions that the next generation of AI data centers is likely to utilize to improve power efficiency.

An investor is sitting at a desk in front of a laptop reviewing AI investment prospects.

Image source: Getty Images.

It’s not a high-growth business yet, for the record; double-digit revenue growth is still a very good year for this company. Its revenue and earnings growth are apt to accelerate in the foreseeable future, however, driven by its soup-to-nuts offerings at a time when factories, automobiles, healthcare, and even cities are becoming more AI-automated.

ON’s a consistent grower in the meantime and usually profitable. And when it isn’t, it’s often for non-operational reasons like last quarter’s restructuring impairment charge. This fiscal viability makes it something of a standout compared to many of its direct competitors like Navitas and Wolfspeed.

Astera Labs hardware helps AI data centers function faster

Last but not least, add Astera Labs to your list of overlooked or unknown AI stocks to buy in 2026 before the crowd discovers its potential.

In the industry’s infancy, AI data centers were built using existing, off-the-shelf components like Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs), networking hardware from Cisco, and PC memory chips from Micron. And it was fine… in the beginning. It didn’t take the business very long to realize it was consuming and creating more digital information than this generation of equipment could handle. It needed more, but it also needed cost-effective solutions capable of integrating older hardware with newer components.

Astera Labs answered the call.

In simplest terms, Astera designs and manufactures entire systems that interconnect an AI data center’s thousands of processors. Specifically, its Aries retimers and cables receive and deliver high-speed signals from processors, its Scorpio fabric switches make the most of available bandwidth, its Leo memory controllers improve the existing memory capacity of legacy physical interfaces, while its Taurus ethernet cards dramatically improve traditional networking solutions. Astera Labs also offers the software that makes all of this hardware work together to achieve some pretty amazing optimization. That’s why its list of customers and partners consists of hyperscalers like Microsoft and Amazon.

Astera Labs Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(2.02%) $3.96

Current Price

$199.61

The company’s time is finally here. Last fiscal quarter’s revenue of $308.4 million was 14% better than the previous quarter’s and 93% higher year over year. Analysts expect comparable revenue growth this year and next to drive even more explosive earnings growth. Yes, Astera Labs is profitable too, on pace to report nearly $3 per-share profit in 2026, en-route to an expected $4.33 for 2027.

It’s not a cheap stock, priced at 45 times next year’s projected earnings. That’s not terribly expensive, however, given the long-term opportunity at hand. Industry research outfit Global Market Insights expects the worldwide data center infrastructure market that Astera serves to grow at an average annual pace of 13.4% through 2034.

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Canvas Hack Hits Nearly 9,000 Schools And Interrupts Online Access Right Before Finals


A cyberattack on Canvas, the learning management system used by thousands of K-12 schools, colleges, and universities, knocked the platform offline Thursday, May 7, leaving millions of students and faculty without access to course materials at the worst possible moment — as many schools and colleges approach finals.

The hacking group ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for the breach, posting a list on a dark web site that named more than 8,800 institutions as affected. Instructure, the parent company behind Canvas, placed Canvas, Canvas Beta, and Canvas Test into maintenance mode while it investigated. While the company is reporting that it restored access for most users late Thursday evening, there are still many reports on social media about outages.

ShinyHunters_Hacking_Message

What Was Exposed: Instructure has said the stolen data appears to include names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and messages users exchanged on the platform. The company has stated it found no evidence that passwords, dates of birth, government identifiers, or financial information were involved.

The hackers have given Instructure until May 12 to pay a ransom, or they say they will leak the data publicly. An earlier deadline on May 8 has already passed, and cybersecurity researchers tracking the group say extortion negotiations may still be ongoing.

The Scope of Disruption: Canvas has more than 30 million active users globally and over 8,000 institutional customers, according to Instructure. Inside Higher Ed reports Canvas is used by roughly 41% of higher education institutions in North America, making it the dominant Learning Management System (LMS) in the region.

Some of the impacted colleges include Harvard, Columbia, Rutgers, Georgetown, the University of Pennsylvania, Virginia Tech, the University of New Mexico, the University of Florida, Johns Hopkins, Duke, and the University of Iowa.

The University of Texas at San Antonio pushed back Friday finals. The University of California system temporarily blocked or redirected Canvas access at its locations as a precaution.

Disruptions were also reported in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, and the Netherlands, where 44 institutions were affected.

Two Major Risks For Students: Beyond the threat of leaked personal data, some students and faculty have raised concerns about the integrity of grades and assignment records housed in Canvas. Final grades, submission timestamps, and academic records all flow through the platform. Some students at Johns Hopkins reported error messages when trying to view final grades Thursday. And if there are issues, what are schools doing to move deadlines and validate information?

The University of Florida warned students to watch for phishing emails posing as Canvas notifications — a common follow-up tactic after a major breach.

What to Watch: The May 12 is the next ransom deadline. If Instructure does not negotiate, the data could be posted publicly on the dark web. Schools have begun notifying students and parents and are likely to roll out free identity protection services, as has become standard after large breaches of this size. Lawsuits will also likely follow.

How this Connects: Education technology has become a high-value target for ransomware crews. The Canvas breach closely resembles the recent attack on PowerSchool, another major learning management vendor, which exposed records on tens of millions of students and led to federal charges against a Massachusetts college student. Past attacks have also hit Minneapolis Public Schools and the Los Angeles Unified School District.

For students worried about identity theft, a free security freeze with all three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion) remains the most effective protection, along with monitoring your credit.

It’s also a good moment to change your passwords, especially if you use the same password to login to Canvas as other tools. 

Student loan borrowers should be especially alert: stolen email addresses are often used to launch fake servicer or financial aid scams.

It’s important to remember that most people’s data has already been stolen, so the key is ensuring that your vigilant against it’s misuse. 

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CFTC Orders New York Based Trader To Pay $200K Fine For Spoofing In Treasury Futures Market


The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has finalized an enforcement action against Sidney Lebental, requiring him to pay a $200,000 civil fine for engaging in spoofing practices in the treasury futures market. Lebental, who holds dual French and American citizenship and lived in New York at the time, was accused of repeatedly manipulating order books through deceptive trading tactics involving Ultra U.S. Treasury Bond futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade.

The regulatory order, issued on May 6, 2026, resolves the charges without admitting or denying the findings. In addition to the monetary penalty, Lebental faces a temporary ban preventing him from trading any commodity interests for one month.

He has also been ordered to permanently stop any conduct that violates the Commodity Exchange Act’s explicit prohibition on spoofing.

According to the CFTC’s findings, the misconduct occurred on roughly 50 separate occasions between January and September 2019.

Lebental’s strategy involved placing genuine orders for cash Treasury securities—or, in certain instances, for a Treasury futures contract—that he genuinely intended to execute on one side of the market.

At the same time, he would submit opposing orders in a closely related Treasury futures contract that he never planned to fill.

These fake orders, known as spoof orders, were designed solely to create the illusion of market pressure on the opposite side of the book. Once his legitimate orders were successfully matched and executed, Lebental would immediately cancel the spoof orders.

This layered approach exploited the correlation between cash Treasury instruments and their futures counterparts, potentially distorting price signals and liquidity perceptions for other participants.

Spoofing is considered a serious form of market manipulation because it undermines the fundamental principle of transparent price discovery in derivatives markets.

Even brief instances can mislead algorithms, other traders, and institutional investors who rely on accurate order-flow information to make decisions.

The CFTC’s action highlights the agency’s continued focus on high-frequency and sophisticated trading abuses in the fixed-income futures arena.

Treasury futures, particularly the Ultra contract, play a critical role in global interest-rate hedging and serve as benchmarks for trillions of dollars in financial products.

Disruptions caused by spoofing can ripple through broader bond markets, affecting everything from mortgage rates to pension fund returns.

While the penalty amount and trading suspension reflect the limited scope—approximately 50 incidents over nine months—the case serves as a clear reminder that regulators are actively monitoring electronic trading platforms for patterns of cancellation-heavy behavior paired with executed opposite-side trades.

Market participants are expected to maintain strict internal controls to prevent such violations, as even isolated episodes can trigger enforcement. Lebental’s settlement avoids a full administrative hearing, allowing the CFTC to close the matter efficiently while imposing meaningful sanctions.

The order reinforces the agency’s message that spoofing, regardless of the financial instrument or the trader’s background, will not be tolerated. As electronic markets grow more complex, the CFTC continues to use data analytics to detect these fleeting but impactful manipulations, ensuring fairness and integrity for participants.



Federal court strikes down Trump’s 10% global tariff — what it means for brokers


Uncertainty is the real enemy

Taylor said the market is getting hit from multiple directions at once, and no single factor is solely to blame.

“With the Iranian war, constricted trade flows, high oil prices, inflation, everyone’s being more conservative,” he said. “That keeps prices at bay.”

Softwood lumber imports from Canada are already carrying a combined duty penalty of 45%, while European lumber faces a 10% tariff. Those costs have driven up input costs for builders even as demand for new homes stays sluggish. Taylor noted that housing starts have declined every year since their 2021 peak, and he expects 2026 to be no different.

Higher oil prices are making things worse at every stage of the construction supply chain, from logging crews through to the lumber yard.

“Higher oil prices, that’s going to impact all the way through the supply chain,” Taylor said. “Loggers, truck drivers, mills, transportation, market distribution, all the way to the customer.”

How Fast-Growing Companies Can Make Better Decisions


There’s often a moment when founders of fast-growth ventures realize they have lost control of the decisions being made around them. Perhaps a pile of money goes missing, they hear an important customer complaint three weeks late, or a well-intentioned manager without guidance makes a hire that doesn’t fit. What’s less understood is why this happens when it does—and why it tends to strike along the same fault lines: alignment, operational complexity, financial management, and oversight.



Judge weighing future of DC golf course doesn’t want to be Amy Poehler while Trump remakes parks



A federal judge weighing the future of an expansive Washington park insisted this week she had no intention of becoming Amy Poehler, the actress who spent seven seasons memorably playing the head of a local parks and recreation department.

But President Donald Trump might be interested in the role.

Shortly after the United States and Iran exchanged fire on Thursday, Trump made a quick jaunt to the National Mall to review the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool that he ordered repainted a color he describes as “American flag blue.”

The project has been on his mind lately. During an hour-plus speech Monday to small-business owners, Trump spent about nine minutes talking about the paint job, detailing the granite floor and boasting that he whittled the renovation’s cost to $1.9 million from what he said was an initial $350 million estimate.

Trump’s next project might be East Potomac Park, home to an affordable, accessible public golf course with views of the Washington Monument.

The Republican president has talked of transforming it into a posh “U.S. Open-caliber course.” Signs were posted this week warning of a disruption and preservation advocates took the government to court as debris dumped there from the White House East Wing demolition tested positive for lead.

By late Friday, the nonprofit that operates the course said it would continue managing the space until the National Park Service begins a “historic restoration.”

Meanwhile, the White House told a planning agency that it would cost taxpayers at least $7.5 million to follow through on Trump’s plan to paint the granite Eisenhower Executive Office Building white.

And that was just this week in Washington’s extreme makeover.

All the president’s projects

Over the past year, Trump has bulldozed the East Wing to make way for a ballroom. His name was added to the facades of the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Kennedy Center, which he plans to close for a two-year renovation. His face adorns a banner at the Department of Justice’s headquarters, among others. He is pushing for a triumphal arch near Arlington Cemetery and has closed parks, including Lafayette Square across from the White House, for a rehab.

Trump is guaranteeing himself a lasting imprint on a city where he won just 6.5% of the vote in 2024. He is flexing extraordinary executive power and offering fresh insight into how he spends his time, perhaps a president’s most valuable asset.

As the Washington projects unfolded this week, the ceasefire in Iran was at risk of unraveling, motor club AAA said the average price of a gallon of gas surpassed $4.50 and elections provided new evidence of Democratic enthusiasm heading into the November elections.

“It’s not a zero-sum game but obviously all presidents have limited amounts of capital they can use and limited amounts of attention that they have to give,” said presidential historian Julian Zelizer of Princeton University. “And he’s deciding, in a moment of war, a moment of economic instability, that this is a priority.”

Trump rejects such concerns.

Asked at the Reflecting Pool why he was focused on the project given the U.S. military action in Iran, he said, “Our country is about beauty, cleanliness, safety, great people. Not a filthy capital.”

Political considerations for Republicans

For Republicans defending slim congressional majorities, it is not so simple. Many would prefer to talk about policy accomplishments, including tax cuts, rather than multimillion-dollar Washington construction projects.

While few directly criticize Trump, there is an acknowledgment that the party needs to confront economic realities.

“A lot of Americans are very worried about the cost of living and we need to address it,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said recently.

A Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll conducted in late April found that 52% percent of Americans oppose Trump’s planned arch. That includes about 6 in 10 independents. Some 51% of Republicans favor it.

Americans oppose the ballroom by a 2-to-1 margin, driven largely by Democrats and independents. About 2 in 10 Republicans oppose the project, according to the poll. The poll did not find a notable shift in support of the ballroom after a shooting at last month’s White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. Trump has cited that incident in his push for a secure facility, something he did not mention when he initially ordered the demolition of the East Wing.

Trump is showing no sign of backing away from any of the projects. In a sign of the GOP’s loyalty to him, Republican senators added $1 billion in White House security upgrades for the ballroom to an unrelated bill this week. Trump initially said taxpayer money would not be needed.

A dizzying pace of change in Washington

In a city where historic preservation is often sacred, the pace of change has been dizzying.

Rebecca Miller, the executive director of DC Preservation League, has spent 23 years at the organization, which sued to stop the golf course takeover and joined a coalition attempting to force the Kennedy Center to comply with preservation laws. She said her organization has worked with administrations of both parties and called the Trump moves “highly unusual.”

“One of the problems that we have right now is an administration that seems to think that it can just plow ahead without any input,” she said. “These assets are owned by the people of the United States. They’re not anybody’s personal portfolio.”

White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers said Trump is “laser-focused on lowering costs for working families, deporting illegal criminals, keeping our cities safe, beautifying our nation’s capital, and protecting our national security by ensuring Iran can never possess a nuclear weapon all at the same time.”

This is not the first time a White House has taken an interest in Washington’s appearance.

During Lyndon Johnson’s administration, first lady Lady Bird Johnson oversaw beautification efforts that included planting trees and flowers throughout the District of Columbia.

Her efforts were sometimes derided as distractions from other pressing issues, such as the Vietnam War. But she implemented them in coordination with local officials.

“Lady Bird Johnson was trying to bring out the natural beauty of Washington,” said Mark Updegrove, chairman of the LBJ Foundation and a presidential historian. “Donald Trump is trying to remake the nation’s capital in his own image.”

Trump’s assertion of power over Washington, including the continued deployment of National Guard troops, has animated the city’s Democratic primary next month for key local offices, including mayor and delegate to Congress.

The first question at a forum for mayoral candidates this week focused on how to protect the Home Rule Act, the 1973 law that gave the city limited self-government. The candidates said they would stand up to Trump as needed, though one contender, Vincent Orange, noted that national Democrats had also failed the district.

“The two times that we had an opportunity at statehood, it was the Democrats who let us down,” he said, referring to failed congressional attempts to make the city a state with full rights of representation.

In an interview, Janeese Lewis George, a D.C. Council member and top candidate in the mayor’s race, said city officials need to do a better job of making their case in Congress for statehood. She said Trump’s impact on the city is broader than the renovations, as she referred to the troop deployments as a “federal occupation” and noted the fallout from immigration enforcement activity and cuts to the federal workforce.

“The people of our city are afraid,” she said. “It’s the mayor’s job to really let the nation know that D.C. has uniquely been left vulnerable.”

Tom Davis, a Virginia Republican who often supported the city’s autonomy when he was a congressman, said the renovations offer an “opportunity to bring some money into the city and spruce up stuff that you wouldn’t have had otherwise.”

“But this is tough,” he said. “This is not a city that is in love with the president.”