When Donald Trump takes control of the White House on Monday, he will inherit something his voters hardly would have expected during a long campaign of berating outgoing President Joe Biden on immigration: a U.S.-Mexico border with the lowest number of illegal crossings in five years.
It all comes after the tumultuous relationship between Biden and Trump was on full display in the presidential race.
Every president since Ronald Reagan has left a note for his successor, and President Joe Biden could be the first to write a letter to someone who is both his successor and the predecessor who left a note for him.
President Joe Biden — in an interview with MSNBC ’s Lawrence O’Donnell that aired Thursday and which was Biden’s last TV sit-down as POTUS ― reflected on his failure to hype up his and Democratic accomplishments when in office.
President Biden entered office alongside a hopeful media, but as four years passed, members of the press were quick to point out that Donald Trump's return would be his legacy.
Online users discussing this rumor pointed to an NBC News article published in the final days of Joe Biden's U.S. presidency.
In his final week in the White House, the president has made it much more difficult for his successor to undo Russian sanctions.
If you cover the right side of Trump's face with your hand and squint, he looks like Joe Biden. If you cover the right side of his face with your hand and squint he looks like Joe biden
The super-rich have long played a role in U.S. politics but have an unusually prominent spot in incoming President Donald Trump’s new administration
President Joe Biden has released a farewell letter to Americans, appearing to gibe President-elect Donald Trump. In the letter published online by the White House on Wednesday, Biden appeared to refer to the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters as the "worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War."
A bipartisan bill banning TikTok was passed by Congress and signed into law by Biden last year. While Trump previously called for a ban on the app due to its ties to the Chinese government, he has more recently been opposed to the ban and indicated that he will seek to reverse it.