U.S. President Donald Trump has used one of the flurry of executive actions that he issued on his first day back in the White House to begin the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization for the second time in less than five years.
Public health experts say the United States’ departure could cripple the WHO’s operations or leave an opening for China to assume greater control over the agency.
As expected, President Donald Trump hit the ground running on Monday, signing scores of executive orders on various topics ranging from immigration to social issues. Among the policies implemented by Trump on his first day back in the White House were orders to withdraw the United States from two key international institutions.
The ending of the commitment to the World Health Organization by the United States poses as an existential threat to the well-being of the international working class.
As anticipation builds for the March for Life on Friday, Priests for Life, an anti-abortion organization, will host a protest outside D.C.'s Planned Parenthood.
Donald Trump staged a dramatic and triumphant comeback to the prestigious and powerful office of the White House on, Martin Luther King Day, as the 47th President of the United States.
FIRST IN NATSEC DAILY – NEW DFC CONTENDER: Former senior Trump State Department official KEITH KRACH is being considered to head up the Development Finance Corporation, two people familiar with the matter told Lippman.
President Donald Trump returned from a campaign-style rally at a Washington, D.C., arena to the White House to sign more executive orders, including a sweeping one that pardoned those convicted of storming the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
After being inaugurated, Trump attended a parade in his honor at Capital One Arena and signed a number of executive orders and pardons for his supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
President Donald Trump's inauguration was filled with sweeping executive orders, a roaring crowd of supporters at Capital One Arena, and glitz and glamour at inaugural balls.
After he is through signing the orders, Trump will attend inaugural balls tonight. After President Donald Trump signed sweeping pardons for over 1,500 convicted Jan. 6 rioters on Monday, crowds began to gather at the Central Detention Facility in Washington, D.C., to celebrate their release.