📰 Full Story
The U.S. Treasury announced late March 2026 that President Donald Trump’s signature will be printed on all new U.S. paper currency this year, a first for a sitting president.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the move is intended to mark the nation’s 250th anniversary and will place the president’s autograph alongside the Treasury secretary’s; it will remove the U.S. treasurer’s printed signature for the first time since 1861.
Printing of redesigned $100 notes is slated to begin in June, with other denominations to follow and new bills entering circulation in subsequent weeks.
The decision comes amid a broader push by the administration to place Trump’s name and likeness on government institutions and commemorative coinage — a 24‑karat gold coin bearing Trump’s image was recently approved by a federal arts panel — and has prompted criticism from Democrats, legal scholars and some numismatists.
Treasury officials say statutory limits on portraits will keep bill faces unchanged and that the department has discretion over signatures; critics call the step unprecedented politicization of a longtime financial norm as Americans face rising costs and geopolitical tensions.
🔗 Based On
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
The discussion frames the signature change as part of a broader pattern of personalization by the president, largely symbolic and evocative, and notes legal and practical limits — including impeachment rules and potential cost/complexity of reversing such actions.







💬 Commentary