President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration ceremony has been moved to the U.S. Capitol rotunda on Monday due to winter weather.
President-elect Donald Trump is set to hold a 'victory rally' in Washington D.C., one day before his inauguration. Here's what to know.
Donald Trump is set to return to the Capitol Building as he prepares for his second inauguration as president of the United States.Mr Trump will succeed Joe Biden in the White House from January 20, when he takes the oath of office in Washington D.
President-elect Donald Trump, alongside his wife Melania and other family members, watched as fireworks lit up the sky from the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia, on Saturday during a
President-elect Donald Trump boarded Air Force One on Saturday to return to Washington, D.C., for his second inauguration. Newsweek reached out to the Trump transition team for comment by email on Saturday evening.
The 78-year-old president-elect is scheduled to hold a rally with supporters at the Capital One Arena in downtown Washington on Sunday, the eve of his inauguration. Another post-inauguration event is planned for Monday afternoon.
A forecast of record cold temperatures on Monday upended the planned ceremony, which now will take place indoors. More than 220,000 ticketed guests will be unable to view the swearing-in.
The march was not expected to attract the same numbers as 2017's mammoth Women's March - but organisers said its goals were very different eight years on.
The last president to be sworn-in indoors was Ronald Reagan in 1985, when cold weather also plagued the US Capitol.
With President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration being moved inside the Capitol Rotunda, he has announced a viewing and celebration will be held at Capital One Arena.Monday, Jan. 20 is set to be one of the coldest Inaugurations in history,
President-elect Trump confirms his second inauguration will be moved indoors due to the snow and cold temperatures.