After testing positive for COVID-19 and being moved to Walter Reed hospital, Donald Trump posted a video, reassuring people that he is doing okay.
15.09.2020 - 16:57 / etcanada.com
Donald Trump is not a believer in climate change.
The U.S. president made that clear once again on Monday during a meeting with California officials about the ongoing wildfire crisis in the state.
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When natural resource secretary Wade Crowfoot pressed Trump to acknowledge that untamed vegetation was not the only cause of the increasingly devastating fires each year, the president responded, “OK, it’ll start getting
After testing positive for COVID-19 and being moved to Walter Reed hospital, Donald Trump posted a video, reassuring people that he is doing okay.
Donald Trump’s Hollywood star was pickaxed by someone impersonating the Incredible Hulk on Friday.
Donald Trump took to Twitter on Thursday night, and revealed that he and First Lady Melania Trump have tested positive for COVID-19. Following the announcement, celebs and public figures took to Twitter to weigh in on Trump’s claim of having contracted the coronavirus.
Donald Trump took to Twitter on Thursday night, and revealed that he and First Lady Melania Trump have tested positive for COVID-19.
Celebrities are speaking out with their reactions to the news that President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump have both tested positive for COVID-19.
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing Editor“After watching last night’s debate,” said California Governor Gavin Newsom on Wednesday, “this signing can’t come too soon.”He was, of course, referring to outcry after president Donald Trump declined to denounce white supremacist groups during his debate with Joe Biden on Tuesday night.Newsom the signed Assembly Bill 3121 into law on Wednesday.
Donald Trump and Joe Biden had their first of three presidential debates on Tuesday night and it was must-see TV for any hot-blooded American citizen ahead of the November general election!
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden paid nearly $288,000 in federal income taxes last year, according to returns he released just hours before his Tuesday night debate with President Donald Trump. The move came following a report from The New York Times that Trump paid just $750 in income taxes in 2016, the year he ran for president, and in 2017, his first year in the White House.
first presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump. Certainly, it offered less twists and turns than but far more real-world stakes than, say,, and there was plenty to tweet upon.Broadcasting live from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and moderated by host Chris Wallace, the debate's itinerary saw the Biden and Trump going head-to-head on their respective records, the Supreme Court, COVID-19, the economy, race and violence in U.S.
Celebrities, politicians, and others are reacting to the bombshell allegation that President Trump only paid $750 in taxes in 2016 and 2017.
Donald Trump's stated support for the coal industry.Guterres' appeal to governments to stop subsidizing fossil fuel companies was echoed by actor and former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who helped organize the Austrian World Summit in Vienna.“When you hear that government plans to spend stimulus money bailing out fossil fuels, we must ask ourselves: if investors aren’t supporting those declining companies, why should taxpayers?,” Schwarzenegger said by video link from Los Angeles.
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorToward the end of his news briefing on the state of California’s multiple emergencies, California Governor Gavin Newsom was challenged about the changing nature of his rhetoric on Donald Trump’s policies.A reporter from the San Francisco Chronicle highlighted the fact that the governor sent out toughly-worded fundraising email after his meeting with Trump on Monday about the state’s fires.In the email Newsom said, “I confronted the President about what’s happening
Joe Biden.Editor-in-Chief Laura Helmuth said President Donald Trump's administration was much worse for the scientific community than the magazine had feared.The magazine's endorsement was posted online Tuesday, a day after Trump questioned the science of climate change in relation to the California wildfires.
Tom Tapp Deputy Managing EditorOn Monday, as Joe Biden called Donald Trump “a climate arsonist,” the president met with California Governor Gavin Newsom, who took an agree-to-disagree approach while calling out the president on climate change.Later, Trump meet with scientists, state officials and politicians to discuss further the massive wildfires scorching the state.Wade Crowfoot, California’s Secretary for Natural Resources, gave the president a blunt assessment his wildfire performance.
President Donald Trump participated in a briefing on the California wildfires on Monday (September 14) and he questioned the scientific findings that were presented to him.