The Diet Coke button returned to Donald Trump's Oval Office, offering the president immediate access to his favorite soda beverage.
With the return of President Donald Trump to the White House, the Oval Office — perhaps the most-recognizable office in the world — has received a makeover.
President Trump decorated the Oval Office with a collage of family photos and other personal effects that were on full display during his first day back in the White House.
President Trump is back in the Oval Office – and the room looks very similar to how it appeared in his first term.
A tray of pens was also ready for Trump to kick off his slew of extreme executive orders, among them renaming the Gulf of Mexico to Golf of America, and departing the World Health Organization (WHO) as well as the Paris Agreement, which legally binds nations to combat climate change.
WASHINGTON (CNN) - President Donald Trump’s love for Diet Coke is well known. So, it’s no surprise his infamous “Diet Coke button” has been reinstalled at the Oval Office desk for his second term. Trump used the red valet button to order Diet Cokes during his first term between 2017 and 2021.
Donald Trump has returned as the president of the United States. On Day 1 of his second term, he made some changes to the Oval Office, his formal working space. The US leader has brought back former President Andrew Jackson’s portrait;
The Oval Office underwent an overhaul on Monday as Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president. Portraits of founding fathers George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Thomas Jefferson have returned to the presidential office,
Trump’s flashy PR optics turn presidential power into presidential spectacle. As a former reality TV producer and veteran campaigner, President Donald Trump knows a thing or two about stagecraft. Now back in the White House,
Trump began his second term with a series of executive actions. The 47th US president ordered a crackdown on immigration and withdrew the US from the Paris Climate Agreement and World Health Organization.
Along with formatting errors and typos, Trump's first executive orders also contain potential errors, sowing confusion over their meaning.