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President Donald Trump Orders United States Department of the Treasury to Begin Immediate Printing of Newly Published $100 “Trump Bill” Featuring His Portrait, Signature and Name
President Donald Trump Orders Immediate Printing of New $100 “Trump Bill” Featuring His Portrait and Signature
WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Donald Trump has reportedly directed the United States Department of the Treasury to begin the immediate printing of a newly redesigned $100 bill carrying his portrait, signature and name, in a move already generating intense political debate across the United States.

According to administration officials, the newly published currency design — informally dubbed the “Trump Bill” by supporters online — would replace the traditional imagery currently seen on the nation’s highest-circulating denomination note with a large presidential portrait of Trump alongside a stylized version of his signature.
Sources familiar with the directive say the president described the redesign as a “celebration of American strength, success and leadership,” while urging Treasury officials to move quickly on production and nationwide distribution.
The announcement triggered immediate reactions from lawmakers, constitutional scholars and financial analysts, many of whom questioned whether a sitting president could legally authorize such a dramatic change to U.S. currency without congressional involvement. Critics also argued that placing a current president’s image on widely circulated money would break long-standing traditions surrounding American currency design.
Supporters of the move, however, praised the proposal as a bold patriotic statement, with several allies of the president describing the redesigned note as “historic” and “symbolic of a new American era.”
Inside the Treasury Department, officials were reportedly reviewing logistical and legal questions tied to the sudden order, including the costs of redesigning anti-counterfeit protections, updating printing plates and coordinating circulation plans with the Federal Reserve System and financial institutions nationwide.
Images allegedly showing mock-ups of the proposed $100 bill quickly spread across social media, sparking heated debate online. Some supporters celebrated the design as a collector’s item in the making, while opponents accused the administration of politicizing U.S. currency.
At the time of reporting, no official timeline had been publicly released for when the new notes could enter circulation, and Treasury officials had not confirmed whether existing $100 bills would remain in use alongside the redesigned version.
The development marks one of the most controversial proposed changes to American currency in modern history and is expected to face significant political and legal scrutiny in the coming days.
