All About Trump Military Parade & No Kings Day Protests
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President Trump is hosting a parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army on Saturday, bringing tanks and soldiers to the streets of Washington, D.C., for the capital's first major military parade in more than three decades.
The day-long festival will take place in Washington, D.C. on June 14, with music performances, fireworks and a grand procession. Here's how to watch.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Eight years after President Donald Trump was dazzled by a grand military parade down the Champs-Élysées in Paris, he is finally getting a chance to try to top the spectacle.
While the idea might be novel for many Americans, military parades are common spectacles in many parts of the globe.
Rain and possible thunderstorms are in the forecast for part of President Trump’s Saturday parade event celebrating the Army’s 250 the birthday — and his own 79th.
Ahead of President Trump's military parade, a transgender service member who was barred from the military, reflects on "patriotism" and her fight against the ban.
Despite the parade, overall travel demand to Washington D.C. remains steady this weekend. Here's what travelers should know.
Plus, Ana Navarro intends to attend the peaceful "No Kings" protests, "not because I hate my country but because I love my country."