Don't expect a repeat. UFC boss Dana White says 'never again' to another
White House fight night
[June 16, 2026]
By DAN GELSTON
WASHINGTON (AP) — By the time Justin Gaethje pummeled his bloodied foe
to a pulp and celebrated a championship win with a backflip off the top
of the wire-mesh cage, then shook hands with President Donald Trump —
and even fist-bumped Melania — this much about his company's future was
clear to the ultimate boss of UFC: Just say no to the White House.
“It was an amazing, experience, this was a one-of-one,” UFC CEO Dana
White said.
“It will never happen again.”
Oh, not because the show dubbed Freedom 250 and ostensibly held to
celebrate Trump's 80th birthday and the 250th anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence’s signing wasn't by White's accounts a
smashing success. He crowed about merchandise sales and streaming
service subscriptions and how UFC surpassed its goals in every metric he
could list at a news conference that stretched well into the dawn's
early light Monday.
And the setting?
Forget it, almost impossible to top on a night when fighters essentially
treated their walkouts like they were kids on a class trip. The all-male
lineup toured the West Wing, the Oval Office, walked past presidential
portraits, through the Roosevelt Room, the Cabinet Room — and the
winners even got a meet-and-greet with Trump.
Gaethje skimmed the copy of the Declaration of Independence that hangs
in the Oval Office and said a prayer before he made the unusually long
walk to the cage. Gaethje battered Spanish-Georgian fighter Ilia Topuria
in the main event and won the UFC lightweight title.

“Usually, I kind of blank out when it comes to getting ready to walk to
the cage,” Gaethje said. “It was pretty crazy, looking at the
Declaration of Independence. The original one. Their language was
different. I'm not smart enough to read that.”
Gaethje also banked a whopping $825,000 in bonus money for winning
“Performance of the Night” and “Fight of the Night” honors.
Trump stayed until the end of the seven-card show and generally seemed
engaged with the fights — at one point he put on a white “USA” baseball
cap — and certainly was all smiles each time a fighter who had a hand
raised in victory then used it on a handshake with the president.
Trump boasted on Truth Social the night was “PERFECT!”
There were few blips on the big night and the blemishes that did happen
were at the expense of UFC's two more problematic fighters.
UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland was escorted out of the
Ellipse watch party attended by thousands more fans by a group of police
officers. Heavyweight Josh Hokit took it further with an extraordinary
and unfounded attack based on a right-wing conspiracy theory about
former first lady Michelle Obama.
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UFC President and CEO Dana White attends a press conference
following the UFC Freedom 250 fight, Monday, June 15, 2026, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert)

For all the hand-wringing ahead of the card, the show delivered on
the star-spangled smackdown that featured pulsating patriotism from
the Marine Band, tributes to first responders, active military and
other White House-designated heroes. Gaethje and Ciryl Gane were
crowned champions inside a blood-splattered eight-sided cage plopped
in the open air right in the people's house backyard on the South
Lawn.
Blood and guts were a mandate before an American fighter wrapped
himself in the flag.
“Hopefully tonight created some unity,” White said as he put on his
hyperbolic promoter's hat. “Even for the people that thought this
was going to be some big political statement or something, this
wasn't. This was Americans, all Americans celebrating the birthday.
For people who tuned in for the first time, because it was at the
White House, hopefully they liked the sport. They liked some of the
guys' stories.”
So maybe some new fans stick around.
After all, International Fight Week is right around the corner, with
UFC 329 set to mark the return after a five-year break of the
company's biggest box office draw, Conor McGregor.
That fight will be held in a more traditional arena back on UFC's
home turf in Las Vegas, just as they will for years to come.
But despite all the pomp and pageantry, the eyerolls and angst,
White stands by his claim that UFC is one-and-done in D.C.
The constant headaches over weather concerns in the rare outdoors
show, the logistics of construction of the cage and staging events
at federal landmarks and the soaring cost — UFC said it was footing
the $60 million tab — made Freedom 250 a one-off for a company once
dubbed “human cockfighting."
“I can’t afford it," White said. "I’ll never do the Sphere again and
we’ll never do this again.”
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