The vice chair of the Republican Party in Wyoming is facing backlash over a racist social media post promoting harmful stereotypes about Black people that […]
Michelle Obama will skip Trump's inauguration
A Republican senator laid on the flattery thick after seeing a photo of Donald Trump and Barack Obama talking at Jimmy Carter's funeral. The pair of former presidents were seated next to one another in the second row of the late president's service,
President-elect Trump opened up a little about his interaction with former President Obama at the funeral service for former President Carter on Thursday, acknowledging it looked
The former president and once-again-future president, who are historically something less than besties, chatted it up before the service began. (Michelle Obama was not in attendance.)
On Tuesday’s broadcast of “Jesse Watters Primetime,” the Fox News host complained that the former first lady had already missed former President Jimmy Carter’s funeral last week. Aides to Obama, who would have been seated next to Trump at the service, said she was in Hawaii at time.
Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) characterized former President Obama’s interaction with President-elect Trump at the National Cathedral Thursday as an effort to “kiss the ring” of the ...
This will mark the first time that a president who has received a letter from an outgoing president may well be writing a letter to the same person who's the incoming president'
Presidential inaugurations are by definition historic acts, but when we think of past Inauguration Days there is clearly a hierarchy of historical pop.
The weather forecast for Monday in Washington has prompted the President-elect to take the oath of office from inside the Capitol Rotunda
Despite speculation caused by Barack’s recent solo appearances and Michelle’s inauguration absence, Barack and Michelle are not headed for a divorce, as the former President made clear in a Jan. 17 tribute to his wife for her birthday.
Trump is only the third president to be sworn in on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Due to the particulars of the calendar and the Constitution, the two events won't overlap again until 2053.