The annual Gridiron Club Dinner is all
off-the-record, along with remarks by the
President of the United States and satirical
musical skits by the club members, and by the representatives of both political parties. The skits and speeches by the politicians are expected to "singe but not burn", be
self-deprecating or otherwise sharply comedic. (President
Barack Obama attended the 2011 dinner after missing both the 2009 and 2010 dinners. In addition, he sang as a senator in 2006.)
Bill and
Hillary Clinton have both spoken at Club dinners, and the 2008 dinner marked the sixth time that President
George W. Bush attended during his presidency. The dinner is held in the spring, usually in March. Between 1945 and 2006, the dinner was held at the
Capital Hilton. In November 1967, the club held its dinner and skits in
Williamsburg, Virginia, outside Washington. In 2007, it moved to the Renaissance Washington DC Hotel. In 1933,
Eleanor Roosevelt held a "Gridiron Widows' party" in the East Room of the White House for Labor Secretary
Frances Perkins and those women whose husbands attended the Gridiron Club Dinner, as her first protest against Gridiron exclusion of women and by 1935, the annual event had grown into a "full-blown imitation". In 2011, the Gridiron Club and Foundation's annual show offered invites through the Harvard Club of Washington, D.C. for a Sunday afternoon post-dinner reception and performance, for March 13 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., one day after the dinner. It claims to offer a neutral ground on which political operatives, members of the press and elected officials can break bread together. This is also true of the
White House Correspondents' Association Dinner and the
Radio and Television Correspondents' Association Dinner. In 1970, after the press's "
sophomoric" skits
Richard Nixon and
Spiro Agnew performed
Dixie to the ire of the one black attendee. At the 2007 dinner,
columnist Robert Novak impersonated Vice President
Dick Cheney while satirizing the
Scooter Libby case, which Novak helped initiate. President
Barack Obama attended the 2011, 2013, and 2015 Gridiron Club Dinners. President
Donald Trump attended and addressed the 2018 Gridiron Club Dinner. The Gridiron Dinner was not held in 2020 and 2021 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The 2022 dinner on April 2 became a COVID
superspreader event when at least 72 people tested positive, including
Attorney General Merrick Garland,
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, and
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. Proof of vaccination was required for entry, and no cases of serious illness were reported as resulting from the dinner. ==Gridiron Club Dinner remarks in the press==