US President Joe Biden has often been photographed enjoying a vanilla ice cream cone, former president Ronald Reagan liked jelly beans and John F Kennedy loved clam chowder. As president-elect Donald Trump's inauguration approaches,
North Jersey home listed for $6.325 million was once home to a stockbroker who donated hundreds of acres to what is now High Point State Park.
Nixon died of a stroke in 1994, surviving Pat by exactly 10 months. He and his wife are buried side by side on the grounds of his childhood home. His gravestone is a simple black slab, the words from his inauguration speech carved in gold:
On July 15, Nixon announced to his nation’s surprise — and Taiwan’s distress — that he would visit China. The United Nations stripped the Republic of China of its position and gave its seat to the PRC in October, and by 1973, a slew of countries had broken ties with the island nation to establish diplomatic ties with the mainland.
When their terms end, US presidents must move out of the country's most famous address and make other living arrangements.
With less than two weeks remaining in Biden's presidency, the public is turning its attention to the legacy of the 46th president, and the reviews aren't good.
Legal rulings and departmental policies prevent sitting US presidents from being prosecuted. Could there be other ways that check the actions of arguably the world's most powerful leader?
Four years after the end of a first term marked by furor, folly, and a failed insurrection, Donald Trump is returning to the White House—and to the city that surrounds it.
Here, NewsNation breaks down some of the strangest aspects of past presidential inaugurations. On March 4, 1829, Andrew Jackson officially became the seventh president of the United States and celebrated in style.
As Biden prepares to leave the White House, a federal investigation into classified documents raises questions about his handling of sensitive information
President Joe Biden will give a farewell address to the nation, ahead of his term ending and President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration next week.
Mike Johnson said he is going to order that the Capitol's flags, which are at half-staff due to the death of Jimmy Carter, be raised for Donald Trump's inauguration.