Donald Trump, the 45th and 47th president of the United States, begins his second term today. He becomes the first president to be a convicted felon, the first to take office after being impeached, and the oldest person to take office.
The VA memo exempts roughly three-quarters of the Veterans Health Administration's roughly 400,000-employee workforce.
The move Tuesday followed a related executive order from Trump accusing former President Joe Biden of forcing “discrimination” programs into “virtually all aspects of the federal government” through “diversity, equity and inclusion” programs, known as DEI.
During the family’s first stint in the White House, Trump appointed two of his sons to lead The Trump Organization, his conglomerate company. Elsewhere in the family, the president-elect asked his daughter Ivanka and her husband,
But quickly, he faced financial difficulties. Per UVA's Miller Center, "Trump borrowed significant amounts of money to fund the hotels and casinos. The situation grew so severe in 1990 that Fred ...
President Donald Trump was sworn in for the second time Monday inside the nation’s Capitol. J. Miles Coleman with the UVA Center for Politics said
President Donald Trump is ordering U.S. schools to stop teaching what he views as “critical race theory” and other material dealing with race and sexuality or risk losing their federal money.
Trump Media says the president's company will expand into various investment products and areas of unregulated "decentralized finance," it announced Wednesday.
What does President Donald Trump's executive order directing federal agencies to "encourage" private companies to abandon DEI policies mean for businesses?
The billionaire and his Silicon Valley associates landed in the capital and immediately moved to cut the size of the federal government, reprising the playbook he used after buying Twitter in 2022.
The idea of Trump using the music of a band famous for its gay anthems has perplexed many, but the Maga movement does seem to enjoy a catchy tune.
A Democrat-controlled panel in the Virginia Senate struck down a bill aimed at quelling student organizations that support “terrorist activities.”