President Joe Biden has spent his final weeks in office looking to Trump-proof some of his biggest policy priorities, from environmental protections to Ukraine support and manufacturing subsidies. The incoming president isn’t amused.
Trump's approval plummeted after the January 6, 2021, riot, but Biden's is on track to be lower when he leaves office.
In public, Trump has decried the state of the nation as "a disaster" and "a mess." But at their private meeting, Trump praised him, Biden said. "He was very complimentary about some of the economic things I had done. And he talked about − he thought I was leaving with a good record."
Joe Biden is expected to unveil new sanctions targeting Russia's economy as part of measures to bolster Kyiv's war effort before Donald Trump takes office.
President Joe Biden's move to protect offshore areas is largely symbolic, but the economic factors that may limit oil output gains are very real.
The White House said Biden's action would protect more than 625 million acres of the U.S. ocean from offshore drilling. Latta accused the administration of allowing “misguided ‘green’ policies to hamstring our potential.
In a USA Today interview, Joe Biden acknowledges the global trends that made Democrats winning unlikely. But he still claims he could have beaten Donald Trump.
Having run as a transitional figure, Biden succumbed early to the fatal conceit that he could be a transformational leader, akin to Franklin D. Roosevelt or Lyndon B. Johnson.
Even Republicans, who have used President Carter to attack Democrats for nearly 50 years, have had to reckon with revisionism.
Volodymyr Zelensky has dismissed Donald Trump's statements that the war began due to Joe Biden's support of Kyiv joining NATO.