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Trump’s White House UFC event exposes the tension World Cup is trying to heal

Photo by Frank Franklin II / POOL / AFP via Getty Images
Photo by Frank Franklin II / POOL / AFP via Getty Images
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Donald Trump got the spectacle he wanted with UFC on the White House lawn, but the scenes outside the perimeter emphasised once more the kind of tension currently felt in the United States.

The World Cup has opened with moments that point toward unity, even with all the political tension sitting around the tournament. All week, we have been shown scenes of fans coming together for the biggest event on the planet.

Then came Trump’s UFC event in Washington. For supporters, it was a patriotic show of American strength. For critics, it was a hostile, divisive and inappropriate use of one of the country’s most symbolic public spaces.

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Trump’s UFC event showed the division World Cup is trying to rise above

At the World Cup, rival nations are being asked to share the same stage. That does not erase real-world conflict, and nobody should pretend football can fix diplomacy on its own.

But there is still something powerful about the idea. Countries with deep tension between them have to arrive, compete and exist under the same rules. At its best, that is what the World Cup still offers.

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Photo by Luis Cano/Jam Media/Getty Images

Trump’s UFC event had a very different feel.

Protesters gathered outside the White House event, with critics objecting to the use of federal land, the political staging and the links between Trump and UFC’s corporate world. The scene was not one of shared national celebration, but of two Americas shouting past each other.

Supporters saw it very differently. The event drew praise from UFC fans, with patriotic imagery, military involvement and a White House backdrop turning the night into exactly the kind of show Trump wanted to put on for his 80th birthday bash.

Football’s biggest tournament is built on the idea that nations can compete fairly, regardless of the political tensions that surround the games. The UFC event, by contrast, seemed to underline how difficult unity has become inside America itself.

US MMA fighter Sean Strickland is escorted out of the UFC Freedom 250 Fan Fest on The Ellipse by US Secret Service and other law enforcement ahead of the UFC Freedom 250 fight on the South Lawn of the White House on June 14, 2026 in Washington, DC.
Photo by Kevin Dietsch / POOL / AFP via Getty Images

That does not mean it was a failure. For Trump’s supporters, it delivered exactly what it promised.

But placed beside the World Cup, it exposed something uncomfortable. At a moment when football is trying to create scenes of shared celebration between countries, America’s own political theater is still defined by hostility, suspicion and division.