President Donald J. Trump delivers remarks on supporting veterans and their families Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018, in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)
The South Lawn of the White House was transformed into something few could have imagined Sunday night: a professional fighting arena, complete with a steel cage, thousands of spectators, and a sitting president cheering from the front row on his 80th birthday.
Although the spectacle drew gasps and applause from the crowd, at least one member of Congress was asking a different set of questions entirely.
Congressman Greg Casar (D-AZ) didn't mince words about his concerns. With UFC selling premium ticket packages at $1.5 million each and President Donald Trump having recently acquired stock in UFC's parent company, Casar argued the event represented a serious conflict of interest.
"It's all about corruption all over again," Casar said, questioning why a commercial sporting enterprise was being hosted on federal grounds by a president with a direct financial stake in its success.
Inside the event, the atmosphere was electric, with more than 4,000 attendees packed the lawn, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. Military flyovers opened the evening, and at one point the crowd paused the action entirely to serenade President Trump with a birthday chorus.
The fights delivered genuine drama as veteran lightweight contender Justin Gaethje put on a relentless performance, battering undefeated champion Ilia Topuria so severely in the third round that a doctor nearly halted the contest.
Topuria's corner ultimately made the call in the fourth, handing Gaethje the championship.
The evening's biggest shock came in the co-main event, where Ciryl Gane floored celebrated two-division champion Alex Pereira with a clean right hand in the second round, leaving the crowd so stunned that several seconds passed before anyone reacted.
For Casar, the night's sporting drama was secondary. With no formal congressional action announced yet, his remarks suggest the political fallout from the event may have a longer shelf life than any of its highlight moments.
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