LETTERS: Hold President Trump to his oath of office; Voters did not like the direction America was going; Green card issue ...
For the second time, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump takes the oath of office on Inauguration Day Monday in Washington, D.C., by raising his right hand and putting his left hand on top of a Bible.
But in one place the drafters of the Constitution wrote word for word what governance would look like under the newly constituted United States: the president’s oath of office. “I do solemnly ...
The chief justice of the Supreme Court traditionally reads the oath of office to the incoming president, but the vice president has more flexibility.
WASHINGTON — Donald J. Trump took the oath of office to become the 47th president of the United States on Monday, capping a remarkable political comeback that he said would enable him “to make ...
Since the nation's founding, the chief justice of the Supreme Court has traditionally performed this duty. Chief Justice John Roberts will read the presidential oath of office to President-elect ...
Since the nation's founding, the chief justice of the Supreme Court has traditionally performed this duty. Chief Justice John Roberts will read the presidential oath of office to President-elect ...
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.” ...
The Republican leader took his oath of office under the US Capitol Rotunda ... No one comes close.” Argentina’s President Javier Milei speaks with former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy ...
Article II of the U.S. Constitution requires the president to swear an oath of office before taking on the role of president. The Constitution does not specify how this oath should be administered ...