Another return to the Oval Office in Trump 2.0 is a sculpture called “The Bronco Buster” by artist Frederic Remington, which sits under the portrait of Jackson.
President Trump decorated the Oval Office with a collage of family photos and other personal effects that were on full display during his first day back in the White House.
Despite social media attention, the Constitution protects freedom of religion. So putting a hand on a Bible, or even using one at all, isn't required.
When Donald Trump assumes office as the 47th president ... somewhat akin to the circumstances that confronted Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln when they assumed the reins of the executive ...
If you were surprised at the tone and substance of Donald Trump’s second inaugural ... “We are all Republicans; we serve all Federalists,” Thomas Jefferson said a few months after the ...
On Monday, President Donald Trump and Republican majorities ... watering the tree of liberty with the blood of tyrants, as Thomas Jefferson did. I think we can accomplish a peaceful revolution ...
"The only president to ever avoid an inauguration was the guy that's about to be inaugurated," Biden said in December 2024.
As Trump's new term in office begins ... D.C., as it did not became the country's capital until 1800 just before Thomas Jefferson assumed the office, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. The country's first and second presidents, George ...
After Joe Biden took office in 2021, reports emerged that he had removed the Diet Coke button from the presidential desk. However, with Trump back in the Oval Office, the button has returned to its rightful place, a symbol of his long-standing devotion to the soda.
Donald Trump, who has returned as the 47th president of the United States, made major changes to the Oval Office on his first day back. The office now has a portrait of Andrew Jackson, a decision that had previously sparked controversy as Jackson was a slave owner and was responsible for the forced removal of Native Americans from their lands.
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.