Glenn Close, Hillbilly Elegy and J. D. Vance
Congress has certified Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 presidential election. The proc took place four years to the day after a mob of Trump's supporters stormed the Capitol to disrupt the 2021 Electoral College count. Trump has repeatedly said he would pardon convicted rioters.
The joint session to certify the 2024 election went off without interruptions as Vice President Kamala Harris made her defeat at the hands of Donald Trump official
A joint session of Congress is set to convene on Monday afternoon to certify President-elect Donald J. Trump’s victory in the 2024 election, performing a basic ritual of democracy that was brutally disrupted four years ago by a violent pro-Trump mob inflamed by his lie about a stolen election.
The House of Representatives and the Senate met in a joint session of Congress to count the 2024 Electoral College votes and certify Donald Trump and J.D. Vance as the next President and Vice President of the United States.
Today a joint session of the United States Congress has certified the 2024 election results. The process was smooth, the results not in doubt. Donald
Vice President Kamala Harris presided over a brisk and uneventful counting of the Electoral College tally on Monday, when she certified her resounding loss to President-elect Donald Trump.
The quadrennial ritual, clearing the way for Trump's inauguration in two weeks, went like clockwork in sharp contrast to four years ago.
President-elect Donald Trump's picks to police monopolies have pleased people in both parties, but some antitrust crusaders remain skeptical.
Congress has certified Donald Trump as the 2024 presidential election winner without challenge. It's in stark contrast to 2021 violence.
Washington — President-elect Donald Trump will hold a rally-type event on Jan. 19 at the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., just ahead of his inauguration, according to multiple sources familiar with the planning.
Close appeared on "The View," and responded to a question about the VP-elect having "a whole different personality" back then, as Joy Behar observed.