Fresh off his inauguration as governor of Indiana last week, Gov. Mike Braun was at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Monday for President Donald Trump's inauguration.
Space is extremely limited in the Capitol Rotunda, but they found seats for Trump foe Mike Pence, UFC CEO Dana White, and podcaster Joe Rogan.
Karen Pence has been criticized for not showing up at Donald Trump's inauguration, leaving her husband Mike to emerge on his own at the high-profile event
Former Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and former Vice Presidents Dan Quayle and Mike Pence were introduced at the second inauguration of Donald Trump.
President-elect Donald Trump is being sworn in on Monday as his inauguration ceremony is set to take rare form inside the U.S. Capitol.
JD Vance’s swearing-in should direct at least some attention toward a question about the vice presidency: Is the office in decline?”
Jan. 20, 2025, Donald J. Trump was inaugurated as the 47th President of the United States of America. It was the 60th Presidential Inauguration. His second term in office has officially begun. Regardless of political affiliations,
Trump as the 47th president of the United States took place on Monday in Washington, D.C. Due to freezing temperatures and high winds, it was held inside the United States Capitol rotunda. It is the second inauguration of Trump as U.
We know that U.S. vice presidents are often the objects of humorous jabs for their secondary role in the executive branch or their public mishaps.
Several former vice presidents were also present including Mike Pence as well as incoming Vice President JD Vance. First lady Jill Biden, second-gentleman Doug Emhoff and several other former ...
Absentees - Washington's version of royalty was also out in force as three former presidents -- Bill Clinton, George W Bush and Barack Obama -- attended, along with a couple of ex-vice presidents, Mike Pence and Dan Quayle. Joe Rogan even managed to wangle ...
The day’s pomp and unusual circumstances made for a lot of close-up encounters between political combatants, some awkward, some not.