WASHINGTON — President Trump revealed Tuesday night that former President Joe Biden left him an “inspirational” message before leaving the Oval Office for the last time. “It said ‘To number 47’ and it was a very nice one,” Trump told reporters during a question-and-answer session in the White House’s Roosevelt Room.
WASHINGTON — Joe Biden on Monday wrapped up a more than 50-year political career, but promised that “we're not leaving the fight,” as he bid farewell to the presidency and flew to California to unwind with his family and ease back into private life.
At the tail end of President Joe Biden’s time as president, his administration is celebrating the successful ceasefire and hostage deal between Israel and Hamas, which will hopefully bring a measure of peace to the region.
The letter that former President Joe Biden wrote to President Donald Trump upon leaving office on Monday has been exclusively obtained by Fox News.
"Join me tonight as I reflect on our progress and deliver my farewell address to the nation," President Joe Biden's X account posted, in part, on Wednesday.
"Maybe we should all read it together," Trump told reporters upon finding Biden's letter. "Maybe I'll read it first and then make that determination."
Former President Joe Biden wished President Trump “all the best” in the next four years of his second administration.
Former President Joe Biden wished President Donald Trump "all the best for the next four years" in the letter he left in the Resolute desk in the Oval Office, Fox News reported Wednesday.
Former President Joe Biden upheld the tradition of leaving a personal letter for his successor, which President Donald Trump revealed. The handwritten note, addressed “Dear President Trump,” expressed Biden’s hopes for prosperity,
Former President Joe Biden wrote a short letter to his successor, President Donald Trump, in which he told the 47th president that people look to the White House for “steadiness in the inevitable storms of history.
Read Biden’s farewell letter to Trump in full - Presidential tradition to leave letters for successors began with Ronald Reagan in 1989