
The Gold Coin Question
The signature announcement arrived alongside a related but legally more complicated development. A federal commission of Trump-appointed members recently approved a design featuring Trump’s image on 24-karat commemorative gold coins, also in honor of the country’s 250th anniversary.
That design still requires official Treasury approval before production can begin.
The legal situation around the coin is more complex than the signature change. Federal law prohibits displaying the image of a living or sitting president on circulating currency, and stipulates that a president may not be featured on a coin sooner than two years following their death. However, a sitting president is not prohibited from appearing on commemorative coins — a distinction the administration is relying on.
President Calvin Coolidge was the only other sitting president to have a coin bearing his image, issued as a commemorative piece.
Democrats in Congress have introduced legislation that would prohibit any living or sitting president from being featured on any form of U.S. currency, whether commemorative or circulating. The fate of that legislation is uncertain.
The signature addition faces no legal obstacle — the Treasury has exclusive authority over the design of paper currency, a power that legal experts confirmed is not in dispute. The coin, by contrast, involves active legal questions that have not yet been fully resolved.