Here’s a short list of presidents who lived elsewhere during their time in office and when the president could move into the White House.
Every detail of the incoming President's move to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave is 'planned to the minute' – from new mattresses to fresh bathroom towels
President Donald Trump redecorated the Oval Office with many of the same artifacts from his first White House term.
At noon today, Monday, Jan. 20, (which is also MLK Day) Donald Trump will become the 47th President of the United ... lived in the White House,” the White House Historical Association’s ...
As millions watched President Donald Trump’s inauguration at the White House on Monday, Jan. 20, many noticed that he did not place his left hand on a Bible while being sworn in. Now people are questioning that gesture, and wondering if the president can be sworn in without using a Bible.
The executive order was among several the president signed meant to steer American schools and universities to adopt Republican priorities, such as restricting how schools discuss racism and gender issues.
President Donald Trump signed the bipartisan Laken Riley Act into law as his administration’s first piece of legislation. People who are in the United States illegally and are accused of theft and violent crimes would have to be detained and potentially deported even before a conviction.
Some states would be receptive to block grants, said Lynn Budd, president of the National Emergency Management Association ... In advance of the trip, the White House released a long list of ...
Kennedy, his brother Robert F Kennedy, and civil rights leader Dr Martin Luther King Jr. The announcement was made at the White House ... United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person ...
Since 1965, the American President and the First Lady have had their official portraits taken and hung in the White House.
William E. Leuchtenburg, a leading scholar of Franklin Roosevelt and the Great Depression, has died at age 102.
Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Trump would open the briefing room to bloggers, podcasters and social-media influencers.