Trump touts 1st-year accomplishments in rambling speech
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As the world turns its attention to Davos, the stage is set for what is being called the most anticipated presidential speech in recent history. With President Trump set to address a global audience,
Some of President Donald Trump’s supporters like to compare him to another two-term Republican president — Ronald Reagan. I’ve never seen that, I suppose you could find some common ground in their philosophies, but their personalities — at least as ...
A Democratic lawmaker is urging President Donald Trump’s allies in government to personally confront the president over his erratic behavior and tell him that he’s “unwell.” After Trump, 79, gave a rambling and at times incoherent partisan speech ...
President Donald Trump gave a self-congratulating speech on Tuesday as he posthumously awarded conservative activist Charlie Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The award ceremony took place in the White House Rose Garden, on what would’ve been Kirk ...
President Donald Trump recently attempted to imitate Joe Biden onstage. On Tuesday, January 13, the commander-in-chief, 79, spoke at the Detroit Economic Club in Michigan and compared his presidential speeches to those of the 83-year-old former president.
Folks, the cheese has officially slid off our president’s cracker. In what was technically a prime-time address to the nation, President Donald Trump spent about 20 minutes on the night of Dec. 17 yelling into a camera, hollering red-faced about how ...
President Donald Trump's Wednesday address to the nation will put a pause on several primetime viewing experiences. The speech, slated to begin at 8 p.m. CT, will interrupt the finale of "Survivor," "The Floor," the "iHeart Radio Jingle Ball" and prolong ...
While the country’s attention was drawn to the federal government shutdown, President Donald Trump signed National Security Presidential Memorandum 7 (NSPM-7), which purports to designate the ideology of antifa as a “domestic terrorist organization ...
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! President Dwight Eisenhower spoke at the United Nations about the destructive nature of the atomic bomb and urged the peaceful use of atomic energy. This is a portion of the speech known as "Atoms for Peace.