A Tiny West Wing Office Is Big on Trump Messaging

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Doug MillsAshley Wu

Nov. 14, 2025

President Trump uses the Oval Office study largely as a display space for items adhering to a theme — himself. Neatly arranged on the shelves are signed water bottles, gold trays, pins and matchbooks printed or embossed with his signature. There are also a dozen or so styles of hats that read:

“TRUMP 2028.”

“TRUMP WAS RIGHT ABOUT EVERYTHING!”

“4 MORE YEARS!”

“GULF OF AMERICA.”

And, of course, “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN.”

The study is part of a small suite of private rooms, including a bathroom and a dining room, that are clustered off the Oval Office for the president’s use.

By Mika Grondahl, Junho Lee and Ashley Wu

On the same day in August that several European leaders met with Mr. Trump at the White House to discuss the Russia-Ukraine war, Margo Martin, a communications adviser to the president, posted a photograph on X of Mr. Trump showing items in this room to President Emmanuel Macron of France and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine.

Earlier that month, video posted to social media showed Mr. Trump presenting items from the room to President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan after a meeting.

Items on display in the study in October included a keepsake gold “presidential bill,” jewelry by the designer Ann Hand, presidential challenge coins and gold trays.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

The president does not appear to be selling anything from this room to his guests. (Though some items on display are available for purchase on the Trump Store website or the White House Historical Association’s online shop.)

According to a White House official, Mr. Trump uses the Oval Office as his primary office, and therefore wanted to turn the lesser-used study into a gift room for guests. The items in the room are swapped out or restocked at the discretion of Mr. Trump.

It’s not unusual for guests of the president to receive gifts or souvenirs. For example, presidential M&Ms with the president’s signature — on display on the shelves in the Oval Office study — are typically given as gifts to guests on Air Force One. (The standard gift on Air Force One used to be cigarettes, shown below.)

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Various cigarette packs, many with the presidential seal on them, are scattered against a black background.
Packs of cigarettes bearing the presidential seal from the Reagan administration.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

But a whole room dedicated to merchandise is more distinctive to Mr. Trump, who used the Oval Office study similarly during his first term. According to a 2022 book by Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns, who were then Times reporters, visitors could take MAGA- and Trump-themed swag from the room. Speaking on Fox News in June 2024, Kevin McCarthy, the former speaker of the House, called the room during Mr. Trump’s first term a “gift shop.”

Other presidents have used this space as a private office where they could do focused work or take phone calls away from the more visible Oval Office.

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President Barack Obama watches Robert Gibbs’ first press briefing in January 2009.Credit...Joyce N. Boghosian/The White House, via National Archives

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President Gerald Ford and his aide Robert Hartmann discuss possible candidates for vice president in August 1974.Credit...David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images

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President Bill Clinton speaking on the phone with Brian Mulroney, prime minister of Canada, in March 1993.Credit...The White House

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President Lyndon B. Johnson talking with Joseph A. Califano Jr., a top aide, in April 1968.Credit...Yoichi Okamoto, via LBJ Presidential Library

The room also became infamous for its role as a meeting place for President Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, then a White House intern, as outlined in the impeachment proceedings against Mr. Clinton.

President Joseph R. Biden Jr. told Architectural Digest in December 2023 that he used the space to work on his speeches. Mr. Biden decorated the walls of the room with a portrait of President John F. Kennedy, an illustration of his childhood home in Scranton, Pa., and drawings and letters from children.

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President Joseph R. Biden Jr. calling Gov. Philip D. Murphy of New Jersey in November 2021.Credit...Adam Schultz/The White House

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Mr. Trump has redecorated the space with a framed sheet of dollar bills and various ephemera on display.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

In place of the Kennedy portrait is now a poster with an illustration of Mr. Trump holding up a fist after the assassination attempt against him in Butler, Pa., last year, and a framed sheet of dollar bills.

There is no desk in the room.

Jeffrey Furticella, Mika Gröndahl and Junho Lee contributed reporting and production.

Doug Mills has been a photographer in the Washington bureau of The Times since 2002. He has covered every U.S. president since Ronald Reagan.

Ashley Wu is a graphics reporter for The Times who uses data and visuals to help explain complex topics.

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