Less than 24 hours before the nation finds out if Donald Trump will be the first president removed from office after impeachment. But tonight, he’s delivering the last State of the Union of his first term of presidency.
16.01.2020 - 18:51 / deadline.com
By Ted Johnson
Broadcast networks are devising plans for coverage of the Senate impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, meaning substantial pre-emptions of regular daytime programming.
Set to begin in earnest on Tuesday, the trial is expected to last about two weeks, and could very well go longer, especially if the Senate votes to call witnesses.
CBS News announced that it will broadcast special reports on each day of the trial, anchored by Norah O’Donnell, with contributions
Less than 24 hours before the nation finds out if Donald Trump will be the first president removed from office after impeachment. But tonight, he’s delivering the last State of the Union of his first term of presidency.
By Anita Bennett
By Erik Pedersen
Fox News host Sean Hannity interviewed President Donald Trump seven times in 2019. His first interview with the president in 2020 was a special one, as Hannity was picked for the sit-down that is granted every year to the network that airs the Super Bowl.The pre-taped interview, which aired during the pre-game show on Sunday afternoon, was conducted at the White House.
The US Senate might've voted against subpoenaing witnesses for the real-life impeachment trial of Donald Trump, but in Saturday Night Live's latest cold open, things went very, very differently during the proceeding. Dubbed "The Trial You Wished Had Happened," the segment featured Kenan Thompson as Judge Mathis, kicking Mikey Day's Chief Justice John Roberts out of his seat and declaring, "this court needs a real judge who got some big brass ones under his skirt."
By Anita Bennett
The Senate narrowly rejected a vote to call witnesses in the impeachment trial of president Donald Trump on Friday, paving the way for an expected vote of acquittal next week.
By Ted Johnson
By Ted Johnson
By Ted Johnson
By Ted Johnson
By Dominic Patten
By Ted Johnson
Jon Voight posted a video message on Twitter supporting President Donald Trump amid his impeachment trial Friday afternoon, calling for "highest prayers" to "save the truth that has been taken down by these cruel individuals of the left."Voight, a vocalsupporter of the president, made several religious references in his video while also calling out "the left" for their "filthy lies and distortions of the mighty truths that have been written.""Let us stand among the greatest statues that stand
The Trump administration on Friday threatened California with a potential loss of federal health care funds over the state's requirement that insurance plans cover abortions.The announcement, timed to coincide with the anti-abortion March for Life in the nation's capital, came hours before President Donald Trump was scheduled to address the marchers in person, becoming the first president to do so.
Politically minded celebrities took to Twitter on Wednesday to voice their respective gripes with Republican senators after they shot down Democrats’ amendments to bring forth witnesses at the onset of President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.
During the first day of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, the President’s lawyer Jay Sekulow gave an opening statement asking, “Why are we here?” In his response, House impeachment manager Rep. Hakeem Jeffries quoted lyrics from The Notorious B.I.G.’s 1994 hit, “Juicy.”
The impeachment trial for Donald Trump is underway, and one thing we never thought we'd hear in a situation like that is a Biggie reference.