Upset over President Donald Trumpâs picture on the 2026 âAmerica The Beautifulâ national park passes, some users have put stickers over Trumpâs face.Â
The federal government says that renders the passes void.
So, some Trump detractors have turned to making plastic covers for the roughly credit-card-sized passes, which hide Trumpâs face without altering the passes themselves.
The passes, which feature Trumpâs photo next to an image of first president George Washington, commemorate the nationâs 250th anniversary and were controversial before they were even issued on Jan. 1.
An environmental group, the Center for Biological Diversity, filed a lawsuit over it in December, SFGATE reported.
Partisan Reactions
Republican and Democratic Wyomingites had mixed reactions to the dust-up over Trumpâs image on the passes.
Putting the current presidentâs face on the passes is indicative of Trumpâs âmegalomania,â Wyoming Democratic Party Chairman Lucas Fralick of Gillette told Cowboy State Daily.
Park County GOP Chairman Vince Vanata of Cody told Cowboy State Daily that Trump detractors should âsuck it upâ and accept the park passes as they are; a fitting tribute to Americaâs 250th birthday, coming July 4. Â
âThe 250th anniversary of our country only comes once. This pass is showing the first president of the United States and the current president of the United States,â he said.

Stickers Render Them Invalid
The Department of the Interior, which oversees the National Park Service, recently clarified that if people protest Trumpâs image by putting stickers over it, their park passes will be no good.
In anticipation of sticker protests, the department updated its âVoid if Alteredâ rules for 2026, SFGATE reported.
The new rules explicitly state that stickers and other coverings directly placed over Trumpâs image count as âalterationsâ that could render the passes invalid.
Meanwhile, the Center for Biological Diversityâs lawsuit argues that putting Trumpâs face on the passes violates federal law governing how artwork for federal items is usually selected.
The group claims that the Interior Department bypassed the required public process for selecting graphics and artwork and essentially turned the passes into a political platform.
âWhat A Neat Mementoâ
Vanata said that he doesnât see a valid point to the environmental groupâs lawsuit.
People who donate money to the Center for Biological Diversity should expect it to go toward saving wildlife and the environment, not a swipe at the president, he said.
As he sees it, the lawsuit seems driven by a âsevere case of TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome),â rather than genuine concern for the environment, Vanata said.
âItâs a shame that the Center for Biological Diversity is choosing to use their donorsâ dollars to pursue a frivolous lawsuit over an annual pass commemorating the 250th anniversary of our county. I believe that they should be better stewards of their donor dollars,â he said.
Vanata already has a lifetime park pass, but said heâd still like to have a 2026 America the Beautiful pass.
âI would love one of these passes just to say I have one. What a neat memento,â he said.
All About Trumpâs Ego?
Fralick said that as he sees it, Trumpâs picture on the passes is just another example of the presidentâs inflated ego.
He likened it to the recent move to rename the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts as the Trump Kennedy Center.
âI really have no issue with the image of a president being on these passes. But they usually do such things posthumously,â he said.
Putting the face of a âliving, sitting presidentâ on the passes seems like self-aggrandizement on Trumpâs part, he said.
Numerous recent social media posts show people coming up with ways to cover Trumpâs image without altering the passes or sticking anything directly to them.
Those included some people offering plastic sleeves for the passes for sale.
Fralick said he usually purchases annual park passes and plans to get one for 2026.
Although heâs not happy about Trumpâs picture, he doesnât think heâll buy a sleeve to cover it.
âIâm not a fan of the current president, but I donât know if Iâd go out of my way to get something like that,â he said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





