President Donald Trump signs an executive order withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization in the Oval Office
Among President Trump’s flurry of executive orders was one reviving a pandemic-era pledge: to withdraw the U.S. from the World Health Organization. Trump signed an order in the Oval Office to withdraw the U.
As he signed an executive order, President Donald Trump said that the World Health Organization had "ripped us off."
President Trump talked about Greenland and Gaza, discovered a letter from President Biden, and signed a slew of executive orders Monday evening in the Oval Office. The orders included pardoning more than a thousand people convicted of crimes committed during the Jan.
A tray of pens was also ready for Trump to kick off his slew of extreme executive orders, among them renaming the Gulf of Mexico to Golf of America, and departing the World Health Organization (WHO) as well as the Paris Agreement, which legally binds nations to combat climate change.
Donald Trump returned to the Oval Office to sign a series of pardons and executive orders, including his promise to delay implementation of a law restricting TikTok. The order delays implementation of a law for 90 days,
Fox News Channel's Sean Hannity will present an exclusive sit-down with President Trump, his first Oval Office interview since returning to the White House.
President Trump on Monday signed an executive order to withdraw the U.S. from the World Health Organization. “Oooh that’s a big one,” Mr. Trump said at the Oval Office as he was handed the executive order to sign. He railed against the amount of money the U.S. pays into the organization, saying that China has more people but pays less.
President Donald Trump has taken the first steps toward enacting his sweeping agenda with a series of executive actions that are expected to kickstart his promised transformation of the federal government.
Another controversial executive order Trump signed was one aiming to cut off birthright citizenship. Critics immediately pounced on Trump, arguing people born in the United States are granted citizenship under the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment even if their birth parents migrated here illegally.
The Late Night host, taking a night off from his more in-depth A Closer Look segment, still chimed in on on all the inauguration night hoopla and assorted other Trump-related day one activities during his show-opening monologue, including Trump unveiling the new presidential portrait and signing over 100 controversial executive orders.