The Treasury has announced a proposed $1 coin with the image of Trump as part of a campaign to celebrate America’s 250th birthday.
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WASHINGTON – The Treasury Department announced on October 3 that it is considering plans to commemorate America’s 250th birthday, with a new $1 coin responsible for the image of President Donald Trump and his now iconic fist-raised posture after being shot and killed.
In a series of Swift, the story was first reported by Fox News and later confirmed by Treasury Secretary Brandon Beach and blown up by the White House and its rapid response 47 social media handles.
All posts show that Trump’s face is a silver coin mock animal on one side and he looked at the sky and pumped his fist in the air.
“There’s no fake news here. These first drafts honoring America’s 250th birthday and @Potus are real,” Beach said in a post on X.
Beach did not respond to a request for USA Today’s comment via X on whether Coin could violate federal laws prohibiting living people from joining US currency.
“Despite the forced closure of our government’s radical left, the facts are clear. Under the historical leadership of President Donald J. Trump, our country celebrates its 250th anniversary and is stronger, more prosperous and better entering than ever,” the Treasury Department said in a statement. “While the final one-dollar coin design has not yet been selected to commemorate the US semi-calcentennials, this first draft well reflects the enduring spirit of our nation and democracy, even in the face of immeasurable obstacles.
“Living people may not appear in US currency‘
Paper currency is produced by the Treasury Department’s Office of Engraving and Printing, and coins are processed by the US Mint.
In a 2016 article, the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco confirmed that “living people may not appear in US currency.”
“It has been a long-standing tradition to feature only portraits of individuals who have died in currency and coins to avoid the emergence of monarchies,” he said. “That tradition became law in the Parliamentary Act of 1866.”
According to the Cornell Law School’s Institute of Legal Information, “The coin issued may carry the image of a living former or current president.”
Treasury officials did not answer questions late October 3rd regarding whether special sculptures have been established for the commemorative coin, including those proposed by Trump.
The law also mandated that “no portraits of the head and shoulders of a living or dead person, nor any breasts or breasts, nor portraits of people living in the reverse design of a particular coin.”
Other commemorative coins
During Trump’s first administration, Congress passed the 2020 Circular Coin Redesign Act, which approved the Treasury Department to issue commemorative coins from January 1, 2020.
The law said some of the coins could honor Native Americans and innovators, and one of the 25-cent coins must honor women. A commemorative coin was issued in 2024 to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Harriet Tubman, a former slave who helped other slaves escape the Underground Railroad.
Contribution: Joey Garrison.

