Washington bureau chief Susan Page interviewed President Biden in the Oval Office over the weekend and discussed the election, his family, and his legacy. From her interview with Biden: PAGE: Three quick questions.
How does he hope history captures his single term in office? Susan Page interviewed President Biden before he leaves office later this month.
FILE - President Joe Biden pauses during a photo opportunity with Medal of Valor recipients in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Jan. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
Transcript of President Joe Biden's Oval Office interview with Susan Page, USA TODAY's Washington Bureau Chief, on Jan. 5, 2025: PAGE: This is the limits of my technological ability. BIDEN ...
On Monday evening, just hours after Donald Trump’s inauguration, the Senate passed the Laken Riley Act, an extreme bill that would allow for the deportation and detention of any undocumented immigrant merely suspected of a nonviolent crime. And they did it with the help of 12 Democrats.
In a statement the following day, Trump’s acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Benjamine Huffman announced that the Biden administration’s guidelines on these areas were being rescinded, as well as an end to what the Trump administration has termed the “the broad abuse of humanitarian parole.”
Republican senators struggled to defend Donald Trump’s decision to commute and pardon hundreds of January 6 protesters including those who were charged and convicted of crimes against police officers,
President Donald Trump redecorated the Oval Office with many of the same artifacts from his first White House term.
President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance were sworn into office today amid heightened security measures in Washington, D.C.
With this action, I have now issued more individual pardons and commutations than any president in U.S. history,' Biden noted in a statement.
President Joseph Biden, who defeated Donald Trump in 2020 but failed to prevent his return in 2024, delivered his farewell address from the Oval Office, defending a legacy that his successor now vows to dismantle and that voters soundly rejected.
Analysis: President Biden offers a stark warning about an emerging oligarchy. That's a reference to his predecessor-turned-successor, Donald Trump.