The first official visit of President Trump’s second term will include Nevada and the disaster-stricken states of North Carolina and California.
President Donald Trump will visit storm-ravaged North Carolina on Friday in his first trip outside Washington since the start of his second term.
President Donald Trump will kick off his first cross-country tour of his second term Friday, visiting disaster areas in North Carolina and California before heading to Nevada on Saturday for a rally.
President Trump will travel to North Carolina, California and Nevada this week for the first trips of his presidency, he told reporters on Tuesday. The president said he will be going Friday to
President Donald Trump said Tuesday he will visit Nevada soon as part of the first U.S. trip of his new term in office.
REPORT Happy Friday. Today’s the day! The new pandas at the Smithsonian National Zoo made their big debut this morning! Can’t wait to meet you, Bao Li and Qing Bao. 🐼🐼 Here’s what’s
President Donald Trump mentioned storm-damaged western North Carolina during his inaugural address Monday. President Donald Trump's first trip since being sworn into office for a second time will include a stop in Hurricane Helene-damaged western North Carolina.
President Donald Trump is set to make the first official trip of his second term, which will include a stop in Nevada. The trip kicks off this Friday with a visit to North Carolina, followed by ...
In total, 205 rail construction projects broke ground in 2024, with a combined capital investment of almost $390bn
By Mitch Kokai Legal battles pitting the Atlantic Coast Conference against two member schools have attracted attention primarily on the sports page. But the disputes raise questions extending
President Donald Trump is heading to hurricane-battered western North Carolina and wildfire-ravaged Los Angeles
Initially, the IRS made Direct File available only to government employees in 12 states: Arizona, California, Florida, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington State and Wyoming. It was later made available to private-sector taxpayers.