A president’s inauguration is a historic day, where scores of Americans travel across the country to see their new president get sworn in and give their first speech as commander in chief.
Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 47th president of the United States on Monday inside the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.
President-elect Donald Trump's will be sworn in under the Capitol Rotunda, rather than outside. But he's not the only president inaugurated in an unusual location.
President Donald Trump is expected to take executive actions Monday that seek to end birthright citizenship, halt protections for transgender Americans, and pardon participants in the Jan. 6 riot.
It's not true that all Jan. 6 protestors were insurrectionists. It's also wrong to call them all political prisoners.
True to his campaign promise, on Day One, President Donald Trump granted pardons to approximately 1,500 people charged in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. The following day, however, brought more sobering news,
Pete Hegseth was sworn in to lead the Department of Defense on Saturday, after a narrow vote in the Senate. The vote on Friday night was initially 50-50, with Vice President JD Vance then casting the tie-breaking vote.
But Trump didn’t stop there. On Tuesday, he pardoned Ross Ulbricht, a bitcoin pioneer who was sentenced to life in prison for creating and running Silk Road, a black market on the dark web that sold illegal drugs. Ulbricht’s cause had been championed by libertarians, and Trump pledged to pardon Ulbricht during his campaign.
But there are different degrees of consensus and convergence, and Yarvin’s argument seemed especially timely in the 2010s because the Cathedral he described seemed to become more and more intensively itself: More ideologically uniform across different institutions (universities,
President Donald Trump kicked off his second term with a flurry of executive actions on immigration, Jan. 6, health policy and more.
Trump’s Moves to Upend Federal Bureaucracy Touch Off Fear and Confusion Agencies are gripped with uncertainty about how to implement a blizzard of President Trump’s new policies as workers ...
Cool, dry and sunny conditions expected across the Philadelphia region through the weekend. NBC10 First Alert meteorologist Marvin Gomez shares when we will see rain again.