ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith said Wednesday on NewsNation that President Joe Biden’s farewell address needed “silence or a simple goodbye,”
President Joe Biden, who leaves office next week, announced on Friday that he was commuting the sentences of nearly 2,500 people convicted of non-violent drug offenses, saying he has now issued more individual pardons and commutations than any predecessor.
Social media reactions poured in Wednesday night as President Biden delivered his final address to the nation after over 50 years on the national political stage.
President Joe Biden has commuted the sentences of nearly 2,500 inmates convicted of nonviolent drug offenses, in an effort to correct the historical and devastating blunder of his 1994 Crime Bill that disproportionately affected African Americans.
A week after clashing with regular Morning Joe panelist Michael Steele, Joe Scarborough again got into a heated debate with a guest on Wednesday’s (January 15) episode, leading to co-host Mika Brzezinski interrupting him and throwing to a commercial break.
President Joe Biden will make a farewell address on Wednesday night, ahead of president-elect Donald Trump’s official inauguration this coming Monday. The final remarks, a long-running tradition for departing presidents in the U.
President Joe Biden — in an interview with MSNBC ’s Lawrence O’Donnell that aired Thursday and which was Biden’s last TV sit-down as POTUS ― reflected on his failure to hype up his and Democratic accomplishments when in office.
President Biden will deliver his farewell address as President-elect Donald Trump will return to the White House next week.
Speaking from the Oval Office as he prepares to hand over power to President-elect Donald Trump, Biden sounded alarm over the accumulation of power and wealth among a small few.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden used his farewell address to the nation Wednesday to warn of an “oligarchy” of the ultra-wealthy taking root in the country and of a “tech-industrial complex” that is infringing on Americans' rights and the future of democracy.
US president Joe Biden just issued a 40-page executive order that aims to bolster federal cybersecurity protections, directs government use of AI—and takes a swipe at Microsoft’s dominance.