Donald Trump, who has expressed his love for American fast food like McDonald's and KFC, also toasted Vice-President JD Vance with Diet Coke at his inauguration ceremony.
The Diet Coke button is back.
Trump supporters celebrated the cover as a symbolic reclaiming of authority. However, critics interpreted the image as a representation of Trump’s penchant for disorder.
The 'cola button,' which had disappeared during the Biden administration, has reappeared after four years. President Trump installed the cola button in the Oval Office shortly after starting his first term in 2017. Pressing the round red button would provide the diet cola that Trump favored.
As the Oval Office underwent a makeover on Donald Trump’s inauguration day, an iconic red button made a comeback, according to The Wall Street Journal. And no, it’s not for nuclear weapons. The Resolute Desk got retrofitted with Trump’s beloved Diet Coke button,
Trump will call for a study of tariff policies, rather than immediately impose them on China, Canada and Mexico. Follow updates here.
President Donald Trump said Monday that he expects to put 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on Feb. 1, while declining to flesh out his plans for taxing Chinese imports. Trump made the announcement in response to reporters' questions while signing executive actions in the Oval Office on his first day back in the White
President Donald Trump said Monday that he expects to put 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on Feb. 1, while declining to flesh out his plans for taxing Chinese imports. Trump made the announcement in response to reporters' questions while signing executive actions in the Oval Office on his first day back in the White House.
Mr. Trump’s co-stars may have changed, but the show has not. He remains a reality-TV star with a reality-TV performer’s instincts. (Fittingly, his swearing-in featured a performance by the country star and “American Idol” winner Carrie Underwood — like him, a reality celebrity who went on to bigger things.)
As he assumes the presidency for a second time, Donald Trump brings with him a broad expanse of business relationships and financial entanglements — and the possibility that those associations could influence his decision-making in the White House.
The incoming president has told allies he wants to seize momentum and avoid the missteps of his first administration.