President Trump took the oath of office for the second time and was sworn in as the 47th president. He laid out a sweeping agenda and declared that the country’s golden age “begins now.”
A disquieting Washington visit leaves me with a sense that America is making a big break from the past.
What’s happening now in Washington, DC, is different from most presidential transitions − in volume, pace, content and breadth of the changes ordered.
Even more than in his first term, President Trump has mounted a fundamental challenge to the norms and expectations of what a president can and should do.
There are two areas of bipartisan agreement about President Donald Trump’s early days back in the White House: voters say he is moving quickly to keep promises and he is far more active and visible than his predecessor.
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The president made good on promises to seek revenge against enemies during his first week back in power, signaling in the process that anyone who crosses him in the future could also suffer.
All of this is what Trump ran on, and he intends to keep his promises. The most important thing that gives me comfort, and stands in sharp contrast to what we've had the past four years, is that there is no question our elected president is in charge and calling the shots.
President Donald Trump, with his usual bombast, has declared that his second term will be a new “golden age” for the country.
The new president’s advisers have become masters of the government bureaucracy they have promised to upend. During his Inaugural Address on Monday, President Trump made a point of telling the country that he had learned “a lot” over the past eight years. The four and a half days since have revealed what he meant.
Launched in 2014 by then— Purdue President Mitch Daniels and continued in 2023 by President Mung Chiang, the Presidential Lecture Series exposes Purdue students and the broader community to inspiring ideas, courageous leadership and models of civic ...
It wasn't the return to power Donald Trump initially planned ... trying to find their way out. Former Trump lawyer and New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani waited patiently for an elevator.