President Trump on Wednesday gave his first Oval Office interview since returning to the White House, sitting down with Fox News host Sean Hannity for an hourlong discussion about his political ...
The revamped White House Oval Office will once again feature the Diet Coke button that President Trump used to summon sodas during his first term. The famous little red button, hidden inside a wooden box,
Donald Trump has returned as the president of the United States. On Day 1 of his second term, he made some changes to the Oval Office, his formal working space. The US leader has brought back former President Andrew Jackson’s portrait;
The Diet Coke button, a distinctive feature from US President Trump's first term, has returned to the White House Oval Office.The Wall Street Journal reports that the small red button, concealed in a wooden box,
The Diet Coke button is back.
In his 2019 book Team of Vipers, former White House aide Chris Sims revealed that during his first term, Trump would use the red button to prank visitors, claiming it might activate nuclear capabilities.
“Everyone does get a little nervous when I press that button,” Trump told a Financial Times reporter in 2017. The Oval Office is traditionally redecorated to the incoming president’s liking ...
Trump told the Financial Times in 2017, quipping that “everyone does get a little nervous when I press that button." Oval Office renovations were made within hours Monday before Biden had even ...
The 'cola button,' which had disappeared during the Biden administration, has reappeared after four years. President Trump installed the cola button in the Oval Office shortly after starting his first term in 2017. Pressing the round red button would provide the diet cola that Trump favored.
They don’t have any bad ones up there.” The Financial Times reported the button was in the Oval Office in 2017, the first year of Trump’s presidency. Demetri Sevastopulo, a correspondent for ...
Trump supporters celebrated the cover as a symbolic reclaiming of authority. However, critics interpreted the image as a representation of Trump’s penchant for disorder.
President Donald Trump took a combative tone at times as he spoke remotely Thursday to an international audience of business leaders, politicians and other elites at the World Economic Forum’s annual event in Davos,