President-elect Donald Trump, who hopes to expand federal use of the death penalty, condemns President Joe Biden’s decision to commute sentences of 37 federal death row inmates to life in
The outgoing and incoming U.S. presidents had different messages for the Christmas holiday, with Democrat Joe Biden urging Americans to reflect and unite and Republican Donald Trump offering a holiday greeting and a flurry of politically focused social media posts.
Over the course of his election campaign, Trump vowed to resume federal executions and make more people eligible to receive the death penalty, including those convicted of raping children or drug and human-trafficking cases, as well as migrants who kill US citizens or police officers.
Joe Rogan expressed his doubts that a "cagey" incoming President Trump will ever release UFO classified documents.
Inauguration Day is both tradition and ceremony; Donald Trump will officially take over Executive control of the country amid highly choreographed ceremonies on Jan. 20. It starts in the morning when the current president — President Joe Biden, in this case — welcomes the incoming president at the White House.
President Joe Biden announced Monday that he is taking 37 people off federal death row to serve out life sentences behind bars — a decision that leaves only three federal prisoners awaiting execution when President-elect Donald Trump takes office next month.
President Joe Biden is commuting the sentences of 37 of the 40 people on federal death row, converting their punishments to life imprisonment mere weeks before President-elect Donald Trump, an outspoken proponent of expanding capital punishment,
President-elect Donald Trump announced his intention to reinstate the death penalty following President Joe Biden’s decision to commute 37 sentences from execution to life imprisonment. “As soon as I am inaugurated,
Donald Trump’s incoming border czar previews an impossible choice for migrant families: be separated or leave together.
United States president Joe Biden and president elect Donald Trump both posted Christmas messages on Wednesday. Unsurprisingly, they were wildly different. Biden, who is set to leave office in January,