
President of the United States Donald Trump has said that he did not want Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other world leaders, who visited him this year, to see the tents and graffiti near federal buildings in Washington DC and, therefore, ordered the cleaning up of the American capital.
“We’re cleaning up our city. We’re cleaning up this great capital, and we’re not going to have crime, and we’re not going to stand for crime, and we’re going to take the graffiti down, and we’re already taking the tents down, and we’re working with the administration,” said Trump on Friday, in remarks at the Department of Justice.
He said that so far the Mayor of Washington DC Muriel Bowser had been doing a good job cleaning up the capital. “We said there are tents galore right opposite the State Department. They have to come down. And they took them down right away. And so so far, so good. We want to have a capital that can be the talk of the world,” said Trump.
When Prime Minister Modi of India, the President of France [Emmanuel Macron], and all of these people… Prime Minister of the United Kingdom [Keir Starmer], they all came to see me over the last week and a half. And when they come in…I had the route run. I didn’t want to have them see tents. I didn’t want to have them see graffiti. I didn’t want to have them see broken barriers and potholes in the roads. And we had it looking beautiful.
President of the United States Donald Trump

Indicating that the clean-up of entire Washington DC would continue even after the VIP route clean-up was done, Trump said, “And we’re going to do that for the city, and we’re going to have a crime-free capital. When people come here, they’re not going to be mugged or shot or raped. They’re going to have a crime-free capital, again; it’s going to be cleaner and better and safer than it ever was and it’s not going to take us too long.”
PM Modi visited the White House for a bilateral meeting with Trump on February 13, the fourth foreign leader hosted by Trump in just weeks after his inauguration in January 2025.

Within less than a month of the start of Trump’s second term in the White House, he had hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, and Jordan’s King Abdullah II.
French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer are among the other foreign leaders Trump has hosted in his second term so far.