Democratic lawmakers who loudly boycotted Trump’s first inauguration say they feel compelled to go this time, while protests are expected to be a fraction of their 2017 size.
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration ceremony is moving indoors to the Capitol rotunda because of a frigid weather forecast in the nation's capital Monday, the president-elect announced on social media Friday.
The sudden weather-induced change forced a scramble for hundreds of thousands of people who had spent months planning for the swearing-in of the nation’s 47th president.
President-elect Donald Trump announced Friday that he will move the inauguration ceremony indoors as Washington, DC prepares for record low temperatures. The ceremony will now take place inside the Capitol rotunda.
POLITICO asked the 2017 boycotters what their plans are this time. Their answers reveal a faded resistance movement.
President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration will be held between the Capitol Rotunda and Capital One Arena due to bitterly cold weather expected in Washington.
The change, a rare break with tradition, will deny Mr. Trump the pomp and large audience he hoped for at his second swearing-in.
The pageantry and parties surrounding President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration kick off this weekend with fireworks and a rally before Monday’s Inauguration Day ceremony, parade and balls.
The head of Taiwan's delegation to next week's inauguration of Donald Trump as U.S. president said on Saturday he was going there to extend the island's "highest blessings" to the United States.
Some of the same Donald Trump supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol four years ago are allowed to return to Washington, D