President Donald Trump on Friday met with local officials in western North Carolina towns still recovering from Hurricane Helene, accusing the Biden administration of not doing enough to get aid where it’s needed,
President Joe Biden is spending his second to last day in office in Charleston, South Carolina this Sunday. Here's what we know about the president's visit.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is heading to hurricane-battered western North Carolina and wildfire-ravaged Los Angeles on Friday, using the first trip of his second administration to tour areas where politics has clouded the response to deadly disasters.
Biden’s win in the state’s 2020 Democratic primary set him up to achieve his life’s goal of becoming president.
According to Charleston City Paper, Biden's visit is being viewed as a tribute to the state. This is due to Biden's 2020 president campaign winning a major primary victory in S.C., which propelled him into the Democratic nomination and presidency.
Biden's pardons have come under great scrutiny by many Republican lawmakers, with Rep. Mark Harris (R-NC) becoming the latest to issue criticism on the matter.
NORTH CHARLESTON, South Carolina >> President Joe Biden urged despondent fellow Democrats not to give up hope as he returned to the warm embrace of South Carolina’s Black churchgoing community to mark the final full day of his presidency on Sunday.
Allison Huynhsaid that contrasted with the "complacency" of Biden, Trump's busy first four days in office showed he was governing in a competent manner.
President Joe Biden visited South Carolina on his final full day in office to attended worship services and recognize his long relationship with a state that catapulted him to the 2020 Democratic nomination with the endorsement of Congressman Jim Clyburn.
In what will likely be the final public remarks of Biden's time in office, he reflected on his decades-long career and urged Americans to "always keep the faith."
Joe Biden traveled to South Carolina on Sunday, his last full day as US president, where he urged Americans to "keep the faith in a better day to come" as he marked the national holiday honoring
Speaking to reporters, the president predicted future disasters would need “probably less FEMA, because FEMA just hasn’t done the job. And we’re looking at the whole concept of FEMA.”