Every president since Ronald Reagan has left a note for his successor, and President Biden is the first to write a letter to someone who is both his successor and the predecessor who left a note for him.
Donald Trump will make history when he is sworn into office today as the oldest President to take the oath of office.
As President Joe Biden prepares to pass the baton to President-elect Donald Trump, it's unclear if he'll follow the tradition of leaving a note in the Oval Office.
Former President Joe Biden wished President Donald Trump and his family “all the best in the next four years,” Fox News reported.
As President Joe Biden gets ready to leave office, we consider his accomplishments, failures, and what his legacy will be.
The American people - and people around the world - look to this house for steadiness in the inevitable storms of history,’ Biden tells Trump
The entire "Presidents Club" will be at a U.S. inauguration for the first time since President Obama's first inauguration in 2009.
A look at the history of presidential letters and whether President Biden will continue the tradition by writing a note for his predecessor-turned-successor, Donald Trump.
Biden was the first president to find himself in the unique position of writing a letter to someone who is both his successor and the predecessor who left him a note four years earlier.
President Trump found a handwritten letter from outgoing President Biden in the Oval Office’s Resolute Desk, continuing a longstanding tradition of presidential transitions.
As Joseph Biden’s US presidency comes to an end, many on social media this week are saying that his legacy boils down to one thing: his active role in Israel’s fifteen-month war on Gaza, which has been widely defined as a "genocide" by human rights organisations, international bodies and scholars.
More than 23 years after the 9/11 attacks, here we are in the very same place we’ve been for endless years—on pause.