At Donald Trump’s final rally in Pittsburgh in November, he said recent immigrants were so nasty that only professional fighters had a chance against them. “The day I take office, the migrant invasion ends and the restoration of our country begins,” Trump said, to applause.
Donald Trump will take the oath for his second presidential term Monday. He faces less resistance than he did eight years ago as he prepares for sweeping Day 1 actions.
Many of Trump's policies during the first term, such as a ban on immigration from seven majority-Muslim countries, were thwarted by courts or otherwise failed. Groups are preparing for a whole new ballgame compared to the first administration.
Former Pittsburgh Steeler Antonio Brown is expected to attend President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration, reports say.
Roberta Corpuz stood just feet behind Donald Trump when bullets rang out at the Butler Farm Show grounds during a July campaign rally. Six months after watching Trump fall to the ground and then rise with a bloodied ear and raised fist following the Butler assassination attempt,
President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration takes place Jan. 20 in Washington, DC. USA TODAY will stream it live.
From a fireworks show at Trump’s golf resort outside Washington, D.C., to three inaugural balls on Jan. 20, the capital will be alive with activity this weekend.
Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman will become the chamber's first Democrat to meet with President-elect Donald Trump since the election and plans to travel to Trump's private Mar-a-Lago resort in ...
Liberal activists have planned protests ahead of Trump's inauguration, but numbers expected to be lower than the 2017 Women's March.
Lee Greenwood will perform “God Bless the U.S.A.” at President-elect Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again Rally in downtown Washington on Sunday as well as the swearing-in ceremony Monday.
Ms. Suh, the “pussy hat” creator, has not sought to reprise her role in the protest movement. She thought that a unifying phenomenon like her hat would still be possible — but the message should now be something different than the defiance of early 2017.
As Donald J. Trump prepares to take the oath of office for a second time, much of the world seems to be bowing down to him and demoralized opponents are rethinking the future.