Vice President JD Vance looks mesmerized as he set foot inside the Oval Office for the first time on Tuesday, during a stunning moment captured on film.
The revamped White House Oval Office will once again feature the Diet Coke button that President Trump used to summon sodas during his first term. The famous little red button, hidden inside a wooden box, was spotted on Trump’s resolute desk after his inauguration ceremony on Monday, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Outgoing President Ronald Reagan in 1989 became the first president to leave a note in the Oval Office desk for his successor.
House Speaker Mike Johnson noted the significance of Vice President JD Vance entering the Oval Office, saying that the Vance's journey from "humble circumstances" to the Washington, D.C., could only happen in the U.
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.
The Diet Coke button returned to Donald Trump's Oval Office, offering the president immediate access to his favorite soda beverage.
President Trump was eager on Monday to point out contrasts with his Democratic predecessor, including a free-wheeling Oval Office press conference.
The Oval Office underwent an overhaul on Monday as Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president. Portraits of founding fathers George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Thomas Jefferson have returned to the presidential office,
President Donald Trump wouldn’t rule out investigating former President Joe Biden in a Fox News interview aired Wednesday.
A familiarity with the gears of government helped Trump’s team move with much more speed and sweep in their first week than they did eight years ago.
Ever since the second and third presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, died on the same day — July 4th, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence — the American presidency has thrown up a goodly number of calendrical coincidences.