In an executive order issued Tuesday, President Donald Trump established a White House task force to supervise preparations for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, which will be the first time the Games are held in the United States since the Summer Olympics in Atlanta in 1996.
President Trump establishes the Task Force on the @LA28 Summer Olympics & thanks Gene Sykes, Chair of the Committee, for banning men from competing in women's sports. 🇺🇸
"The U.S. will NOT let men steal trophies from women at the 2028 Olympics — and we appreciate the fairness." pic.twitter.com/gJWJxF5x7k
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) August 6, 2025
"The L.A. Olympics is shaping up to be a wonderful moment for America. It's going to be incredible." Trump said during the signing ceremony at the White House. The president will personally chair the task force, with Vice President JD Vance serving as vice chair.
With Trump announcing that the federal government will "do anything necessary to keep the Olympics safe," including possibly deploying National Guard troops or armed forces if required, the executive order places an intense focus on security. Trump's prior decision to deploy National Guard troops to Los Angeles in reaction to immigration protests, which lead to many conflicts, is being followed by this strategy.
The task force will oversee multiple areas of Olympic preparation:
- Planning and executing security measures
- Issues of transportation for millions of visitors
- Simpler procedures for journalists, coaches, and athletes to obtain visas
- Procedures for Olympic athletes to obtain credentials
Along with announcing plans for "very, very strong form of testing" to establish athlete eligibility, Trump said that athletes who fail the necessary exams "won't be in the Olympics." This announcement comes with continuing discussions on women's sports eligibility based on gender.
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee chair Gene Sykes was commended by Trump for the USOPC's decision to essentially prohibit transgender women from participating in women's sports.
Making reference to incidents from the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. Trump’s comments appeared to respond broadly to eligibility debates in international sports, although no specific eligibility rulings or controversies were confirmed involving female athletes Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan or Imane Khelif of Algeria, who both competed and won gold in their events.
By stating during a press conference that "The U.S. will NOT let men steal trophies from women at the 2028 Olympics" the White House clearly reaffirmed their stance on the issue.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup, which the United States, Canada, and Mexico will co-host, is also under federal coordination through a separate task force, demonstrating the administration's deliberate approach to overseeing major international athletic events.
The executive order states that the 2028 Games are "one of the most prominent international sports events of the 21st century" and that they provide "a powerful opportunity to showcase American strength, pride, and patriotism while welcoming the world to our shores."
Though coordination between the administration, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, and the International Olympic Committee suggests a major impact on the event's organization and policies, the effects of Trump's executive order and testing requirements remain to be seen with nearly three years until the start of the Los Angeles Games.