• Preparing for inauguration: Donald Trump is in the final days of his presidential transition. Officials are adjusting to new security and logistical challenges after being forced to move his inauguration inside the Capitol Rotunda due to bitterly cold temperatures in the nation’s capital.
Trump adviser Jason Miller says president-elect will “take immediate action” on immigration, energy production
From CNN's Kaanita Iyer
Incoming White House communications director Jason Miller told CNN on Saturday that President-elect Donald Trump is expected to “take immediate action” on his campaign promises shortly after he is sworn in as the 47th commander in chief.
Miller said Trump’s immediate immigration response will target people who have been “processed and approved to be deported but it hasn’t been done yet,” along with criminals.
Miller also said Trump will announce “very important things that go to the deregulation efforts to make sure we can get our energy production up.”
Asked about Chinese Vice President Han Zheng attending the inauguration — the first time a senior Chinese official will attend the ceremony — Miller said, “You have to have that dialogue.”
“I think a lot of foreign leaders, a lot of foreign governments, quite frankly just didn’t respect Joe Biden or his administration the way that they did when President Trump was in office,” Miller said.
Addressing reports that Trump could delay the shutdown of TikTok, which is expected to go dark Sunday, Miller said the president-elect “wants to make good and find a way” after gaining support in the election from young voters, who make up the majority of the app’s users.
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Inauguration plans still in flux as officials adjust to security and logistical challenges
From CNN's Holmes Lybrand
Preparations are made for Donald Trump’s inauguration at the US Capitol on Friday.
Will Lanzoni/CNN
Much of the planning for Donald Trump’s inauguration is still underway, after it was announced Friday that the events would be moved inside due to dangerously cold conditions.
Members of the public will still be allowed to catch a glimpse of Trump’s motorcade traveling to the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue Monday, officials said in a call with reporters Saturday, but many other key details are still being ironed out.
Members of the Inauguration Joint Public Information Center — which includes the Secret Service, DC Police and other agencies — were unable to answer specific questions about how individuals who planned to attend the rally will be able to watch the inauguration and following event with Trump Capital One Arena.
When asked how the more than 200,000 individuals with tickets to attend the inauguration will find a seat at the arena, which holds just over 20,000, the center referred reporters to the Presidential Inauguration Committee, saying those details are not yet available.
One member of the center told CNN there is a security plan in place to handle any overflow of people who are unable to get into the arena when it reaches capacity, but wouldn’t elaborate.
Trump announced Friday on social media that the arena would hold the presidential parade. Members of the center said people will be able to line up on Pennsylvania Avenue to watch Trump’s motorcade travel from the arena to the White House.
The motorcade, however, will not be in parade formation — it will simply be transporting Trump.
The change in plans means the perimeter established with anti-scalable fencing and other blockades will be limited, with additional fencing being placed around the arena on Sunday, and final security installations going up Monday morning.
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Trump departs for DC ahead of inauguration
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
President-elect Donald Trump, Melania Trump and their son Barron board a US Air Force aircraft en route to Dulles, Virginia, on Saturday in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images North America/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump boarded a plane in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Saturday and departed for the Washington, DC, area ahead of his inauguration as president on Monday.
Trump boarded the US government plane at Palm Beach International Airport at 4:34 p.m. ET, alongside his wife Melania and their son Barron.
Trump plans to rally with supporters Sunday at Capital One Arena in downtown Washington. The venue will also stream the inauguration for a crowd Monday, now that the ceremony has been moved inside due to dangerously cold weather.
This post has been updated to reflect that Trump has now departed.
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Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg slated to co-host reception ahead of Monday night’s inaugural balls
From CNN's Fredreka Schouten
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg is joining with major Republican donors to help host a reception Monday night — part of the swirl of unofficial activities celebrating Donald Trump’s inauguration, a person familiar with the event’s planning confirmed.
Zuckerberg is joining Miriam Adelson, the billionaire widow of casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and a major Trump donor, and Todd Ricketts, a longtime Trump supporter and co-owner of the Chicago Cubs, to host the gathering.
Zuckerberg is one of several tech leaders expected to have a prominent presence at Monday’s inaugural events, as he and others in the industry seek to forge closer ties with the incoming president. Meta has donated $1 million to support Trump’s inaugural committee, which has attracted record sums.
The reception was described as a private gathering before the evening’s three official balls. Trump is not expected to attend the reception, which was first reported by Puck.
Adelson contributed $100 million to a super PAC that worked to elect Trump last year and is listed on fundraising documents as one of the inaugural committee’s finance co-chairs.
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Trump will "probably" visit Los Angeles next week, he says
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
A person walks amid the destruction left behind by the Palisades Fire in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles on January 9.
Jae C. Hong/AP
President-elect Donald Trump said he is “probably” going to visit the Los Angeles area next week to survey wildfire damage after he returns to office on Monday. He also said he plans to call on California to distribute water from the northern part of the state to the affected areas in Southern California.
Trump said in an interview with NBC News on Saturday he may travel to California “at the end of the week,” acknowledging he wanted to go on Friday but decided to wait until he had been inaugurated.
“We’re going to be demanding that the water be released from the north into the lower parts of California,” he added.
Trump said he has not spoken to California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom since the outbreak of the wildfires.
Previewing executive orders: The president-elect also pledged to sign a “record-setting number” of executive actions on his first day in office on Monday. When asked if he will sign “more than 100” actions, Trump replied it will be “at least in that category.”
Indoors inauguration: Trump spoke about his decision to move his inauguration ceremony inside amid freezing temperatures forecast in Washington, DC on Monday. He said he believes he made “the right decision” and promised the ceremony is “going to be beautiful, actually.”
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Trump says he told Netanyahu to "keep doing what has to be done" and warned against a broken ceasefire
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President-elect Donald Trump.
Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump said he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “keep doing what has to be done” while emphasizing his desire to see the war between Israel and Hamas end. He again warned that “all hell will break out” if both parties do not uphold the ceasefire-hostage agreement.
Trump told NBC News in a phone interview on Saturday he plans to meet with Netanyahu “fairly shortly” but declined to share more details about a possible meeting. He said he told Netanyahu “this has to end” but that he should “just keeping doing what you have to do.”
When asked if he was confident hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza would be released as part of the agreement, Trump said, “Well, we’re going to see very soon, and it better hold.” He added that the US will demand “respect” to ensure the agreement will be observed and warned of consequences if it does not hold.
Trump’s incoming national security adviser Mike Waltz and his incoming Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff worked alongside the Biden administration in helping facilitate the ceasefire agreement, which is expected to go into effect tomorrow.
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People's March protesters share their concerns with incoming Trump presidency
From CNN's Betul Tuncer
Protesters gathered outside the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, on Saturday to protest the policies of President-elect Donald Trump ahead of his inauguration next week.
Many in the crowd held protest signs, including Linda Hurley from Maryland. Hurley’s sign read: “Fight to protect civil rights for all and our planet.”
She described Trump as a “fascist, felon, liar, indecent human being,” but said she hopes protesting his presidency will give people hope and energize them to speak up.
Miriam Lawrence Leupold, a pastor from Albany, New York, said she’s in the nation’s capital to make her concerns about Trump’s potential impact on minority groups heard. Leupold also visited DC eight years ago when Trump first took office.
Rev. Laura Harbaugh and Rev. Margaret Brack, who are from Episcopal churches in Maryland, expressed concern for minority groups.
“We are going to be working with and for the people that the Trump cabinet and presidency is going to be affecting, I’m talking about immigrants, LGBTQ and healthcare workers,” Harbaugh said.
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Trump says mass deportations will begin "very quickly" after he takes office
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
President-elect Donald Trump said his administration is planning on executing mass deportations of undocumented immigrants “very quickly” after he takes office, reiterating his desire to “get the criminals out of our country” as a policy priority.
Trump said in a phone interview with NBC News on Saturday he expects deportations of immigrants who entered the country illegally to “begin very early, very quickly” but would not say which cities would be targeted by his administration at first.
“We have to get the criminals out of our country. And I think you would agree with that. I don’t know how anyone could not agree,” he continued.
Trump has long previewed plans for mass deportations of immigrants dating back to the early days of his presidential campaign. But in the weeks leading up to his inauguration, Trump and his advisers have suggested the administration could start within days of Trump taking office, with an eye toward some large cities.
CNN has previously reported the Trump administration will focus at first on deporting undocumented immigrants with criminal backgrounds in major metropolitan areas like Chicago, Denver and Washington, DC.
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Iowa governor directs state agencies to "fully cooperate" in federal immigration crackdown
From CNN’s Artemis Moshtaghian
Gov. Kim Reynolds speaks in Council Bluffs, Iowa in January 2024.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Iowa GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds ordered state public safety and corrections officials to fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities, just days before President-elect Donald Trump is set to be inaugurated for a second term as president.
In a memo Friday to the leaders of the Iowa Department of Public Safety and the Department of Corrections, the Republican governor mandated that state agencies must assist with administrative or criminal investigations, contact federal authorities when they suspectimmigration law violations, and honor detainer requests from the Department of Homeland Security. The directive also requires state agencies to facilitate custody transfers to immigration authorities.
Expected executive orders: The move aligns with the incoming Trump administration’s expected hardline stance on immigration, as Trump has pledged to deport all individuals living in the country without documentation.
CNN reported Friday that Trump’s team is finalizing an aggressive slate of immigration executive orders that are expected to be released only hours after the president-elect is sworn in, kicking off an immigration crackdown that will have implications for people nationwide, according to two sources familiar with the discussions.
The planning includes US Immigration and Customs Enforcement sweeps in major metropolitan areas, sending more Pentagon resources to the US southern border, placing additional restrictions on who is eligible to enter the US, along with rolling back Biden-era policies.
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GOP senator: Pete Hegseth "isn’t without fault" but has owned up to mistakes
From CNN's Kristin Chapman
Sen. Markwayne Mullin questions Pete Hegseth during Hegseth's confirmation hearing in Washington, DC on Tuesday.
Allison Robbert/AFP/Getty Images
Oklahoma Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin defended secretary of defense nominee Pete Hegseth while acknowledging he “isn’t without fault” during a Saturday CNN interview.
When asked if he is confident Hegseth will be confirmed, despite various allegations against him including infidelity, alcohol use and sexual misconduct, Mullin replied, “Here’s a guy that isn’t without fault, but he’s admitted he’s made a mistake. And when you can admit you made a mistake … you can grow from it.”
Mullin said that there is value in how Hegseth has “owned up to his past” but also admitted that Hegseth has repeatedly denied the claims against him.
Mullin also affirmed President-elect Donald Trump’s decision to move Monday’s inauguration ceremony indoors due to the cold weather.
“I hate it that the American people aren’t going to see the traditional swearing-in, but I think the president has put the right position forward by keeping people safe, but still invite them to come in,” he said.
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Italy's prime minister will attend Trump's inauguration
From CNN's Barbie Latza Nadeau and Catherine Nicholls
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni attends a meeting in Beirut, Lebanon in October 2024.
Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters
Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni will attend President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration on Monday, her office announced on Saturday.
In an agenda entry posted on the Italian government’s website, it says that Meloni will be at the ceremony at 12 p.m. ET at the Capitol.
Meloni will be just one of Europe’s populist figures to attend the inauguration. Britain’s Nigel Farage, leader of the right-wing Reform party, will also be at the ceremony, he told USA Today recently.
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Biden and Harris express appreciation to appointees and to each other during Zoom call
From CNN's Betsy Klein
Vice President Kamala Harris embraces President Joe Biden prior to speaking at a holiday reception in Washington, DC on December 15.
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris expressed their appreciation to thousands of political appointees serving their administration — and to each other — on Saturday.
Roughly 4,000 political appointees across all aspects of federal government will be leaving their jobs on Monday as President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
Biden later offered a charge to the appointees to stay engaged, according to audio of the call obtained by CNN.
He added, “We’re leaving office — we can’t leave the fight. You’re smart, you’re skilled, you’re passionate, you’re decent, you’re concerned about people — the country will need you again. So please stay engaged.”
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Trump says he will "most likely" delay TikTok ban temporarily, but has not made final decision
From CNN's Aaron Pellish
President-elect Donald Trump attends Turning Point USA's AmericaFest in Phoenix in December 2024.
Rebecca Noble/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump said he will “most likely” delay a ban on TikTok for 90 days after he takes office on Monday, but noted he has not made a final decision in an interview with NBC News on Saturday.
Trump said it would be “appropriate” to approve an extension for the Chinese-owned social media platform that was banned in a bipartisan law passed last year and upheld by the Supreme Court this week.
“If I decide to do that, I’ll probably announce it on Monday,” he added.
CNN has reached out to Trump’s transition team for comment.
Without an extension, TikTok is set to go offline on Sunday. The law passed last year allows the president to delay the ban from going into effect by 90 days but requires evidence that parties working to arrange a sale of TikTok to a US-owned company have made significant progress.
TikTok’s CEO Shou Chew has met with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago home in the weeks leading up to the ban taking effect, and he is also expected to attend Trump’s inauguration on Monday.
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Blinken says he has concerns about the Trump administration maintaining strong international relations
From CNN's Tori B. Powell
Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivers remarks after meeting with the French Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs in Paris, on January 8.
Ludovic Marin/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Secretary of State Antony Blinken says he has concerns about President-elect Donald Trump’s administration maintaining international relations that he says the Biden administration strengthened over the last four years.
He also defended the more than $65 billion in aid the Biden administration has given to Ukraine since its war with Russia began in late February 2022. Blinken said the US making an “investment in allies and partners” ultimately “enabled us to bring so many countries together in defense of Ukraine.”
More on the transition: NATO allies have been bracing for US support for Ukraine to shrink over the next year. Trump has questioned the value of aid to Ukraine and the US commitment to NATO, and while he has said he wants to end the war, he has not yet weighed in on whether his administration will continue providing military assistance to Ukraine.
Ahead of the imminent transfer of power, the US has worked to transition aid to Ukraine from a US-led effort to a NATO-led mechanism, in part to “Trump-proof” the assistance, CNN has reported.
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Movers and cardboard boxes: Signs of transition underway at the White House
From CNN's Peter Morris and Betsy Klein
Movers load trucks at the White House grounds on Saturday.
Rod Lamkey/AP
Transition is afoot at the White House today.
CNN has observed movers outside the West Wing placing items — including multiple tables, framed photographs and art, and chairs — into a moving van parked on West Executive Drive. Ladders and cardboard boxes, meanwhile, were moved inside.
Many artifacts and pieces of furniture in the West Wing are on loan from the official White House Collection and are part of a documented process wherein thousands of pieces of art, decorations, sculpture, china, silver and other items are historically preserved. When it is time to move out, there is a systematic return of the loaned items to the White House Historical Association, which, along with the chief usher and curator of the White House, collects the items.
A majority of Biden White House staffers have already sent farewell notes and turned in their phones and laptops, with a small handful of close aides remaining logged in through the weekend and Monday.
The big White House move, of course, won’t take place until Monday, when about 95 members of the residence staff transform the residence from one first family to the next.
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White House calls TikTok shutdown warning a "stunt"
From CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg and Betsy Klein
The White House took issue with a Friday night statement from TikTok warning that the popular app would go dark if President Joe Biden does not intervene in the matter, calling TikTok’s move a “stunt.”
“We have seen the most recent statement from TikTok. It is a stunt, and we see no reason for TikTok or other companies to take actions in the next few days before the Trump Administration takes office on Monday,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement to CNN.
CNN reached out to TikTok Saturday about the White House statement, but a spokesperson for the app declined to comment.
How we got here: Under a law signed by Biden in April, ByteDance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, was required to sell the app to American ownership by Sunday, January 19. ByteDance made no significant progress toward doing so.
The Biden administration contends, due to timing — since Sunday falls on a federal holiday weekend and Biden leaves office just hours later — that the decision on enforcing a ban upheld by the Supreme Court will fall to the next administration.
Even though some Democratic lawmakers have been pressuring Biden to delay enforcement of the law, White House officials have previously said they don’t believe the president has the authority to do so.
One White House source has told CNN there will not be any fines by the Biden administration associated with keeping TikTok active in the meantime, including potential penalties on service providers like Apple and Google that could continue to provide the app to users.
CNN’s Brian Stelter contributed to this report.
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Trump announces new meme coin days before inauguration
From CNN's Steve Contorno
President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference on January 7 in Palm Beach, Florida.
Evan Vucci/AP
President-elect Donald Trump announced the launch of a new meme coin just days before his inauguration, the latest money-making venture capitalizing on his name and political comeback.
“My NEW Official Trump Meme is HERE!” Trump posted Friday night on X along with a link to a website with instructions to purchase the coin. “It’s time to celebrate everything we stand for: WINNING!”
The website describes it as “fungible crypto assets created and tracked on the Solana blockchain.” It will be sold under the symbol $TRUMP. According to the site, 200 million $TRUMP coins will be available immediately with plans to release a total of one billion coins within three years — all while Trump is in the White House.
Some context: Meme coins, a class of highly volatile cryptocurrencies, often derive their branding from internet trends and cultural phenomena. Among the most well-known is Dogecoin, a digital token featuring the image of a Shiba Inu, originally created as a parody of the cryptocurrency boom. Despite its satirical origins, Dogecoin surged in value, fueled in part by public endorsements from billionaire Elon Musk. The token’s ticker symbol, $DOGE, has now served as the inspiration for the Department of Government Efficiency, a newly formed commission that Musk will lead to identify potential cuts in federal spending and regulations.
A disclosure in fine print at the bottom of the Trump Meme website makes clear the coins “are not intended to be, or to be the subject of, an investment opportunity, investment contract, or security of any type.” The company behind the venture is Fight Fight Fight LLC, a corporation registered in Delaware earlier this month.
Correction: An earlier version of this post misstated the number of coins that will be available at release. It is 200 million coins.
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January 6 Capitol rioters receive sentences, despite looming prospect of Trump pardons
From CNN’s Katelyn Polantz and Emily R. Condon
Trump supporters storm the US Capitol in Washington, DC on January 6, 2021.
Samuel Corum/Getty Images
On the last day of federal court before Donald Trump takes office, the judge who presided over the president-elect’s now-dismissed criminal January 6, 2021, case told a defendant who admitted to disorderly conduct that day that he may be the last US Capitol rioter she’ll sentence.
If Trump grants blanket pardons, as expected at least for nonviolent offenders charged in the 2021 Capitol siege, the judiciary’s role in overseeing the cases would end immediately. If Trump were to also pardon violent offenders and seditious conspirators, those who are serving prison time could be released from federal custody.
“This may be, depending upon what happens outside these walls, the last one of these,” Judge Tanya Chutkan said Friday to the defendant, Brian Leo Kelly, who also pleaded guilty to a second misdemeanor charge, trespassing inside the Capitol.
“I’m fully aware you may never serve a sentence in this case,” Chutkan added.
Others being sentenced yesterday included Kellye SoRelle, who was convicted of obstructing justice because she encouraged the Oath Keepers to delete their January 6 plans over text; a pair of brothers who violently assaulted police at the Capitol; a man who broke down one of the original, 171-year-old wooden doors in the US Senate; and two men who separately sprayed police guarding the Capitol complex with chemical irritants.
The busy scene at the Washington, DC, federal courthouse on Friday echoed the lockdown the building faced in the aftermath of January 6.
The courthouse was surrounded by tall, black metal fencing. A surveillance chopper hovered over the building, loudly, and streets around the courthouse were already closed down by law enforcement for security purposes.
Analysis: The Biden administration is responsible for a string of strong new consumer protections
From CNN's Zachary B. Wolf
Democrats may have lost power in Washington in part because voters blamed them for the rising cost of goods, but when President Joe Biden’s administration hands over power, it will also leave behind a series of strong new protections for consumers.
These are the kinds of actions — many of them obvious and relatively noncontroversial — by which government incrementally affects people’s everyday lives. It’s quite a list:
Caps on annoying costs:$35 is the max monthly cost of insulin for Americans in Medicare thanks to a law passed by Democrats, and some drug makers are now expanding that price cap for even more people. There’s also a new $5 cap on overdraft fees at banks thanks to a new rule finalized by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Bans on efforts to hide costs from consumers: The Federal Trade Commission cracked down on junk fees for concert tickets, and short-term rentals are subject to new transparency rules. Fake online reviews can lead to fines.
Protections for travelers: Airlines are now required by the Department of Transportation to issue refunds for some cancellations, and the government has created a website to compare the consumer policies of different airlines.
Transparency in cable and internet bills: New Federal Communications Commission rules will make it easier for people to figure out what they’re being charged “all-in” on cable bills and a “nutrition label” to demystify internet service provider bills.
“I would say that President Biden has been the the strongest consumer protection president we’ve probably ever had,” CEO of the Consumer Federation of America Susan Weinstock said, arguing the Biden administration went all out to fix “the conundrums that consumers find themselves in when they’re trying to make everyday decisions in their lives about airline tickets, or tickets to live events, or banking.”
Biden is departing his decades-long political career with nostalgia and frustration
From CNN's Jeff Zeleny, Kevin Liptak and Arlette Saenz
President Joe Biden attends a Department of Defense Commander in Chief Farewell Ceremony in Arlington, Virginia on Thursday.
Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images
As President Joe Biden was making one final lap around town this week, delivering farewell speeches to his diplomatic corps, military leaders and the nation at large, his appearances belied a grim reality: This is not how he’d hoped his half-century career in Washington would end.
Biden leaves office on Monday reluctantly, firm in the view he had more to give and more to accomplish, if less sure his health and vigor would have kept up.
He’ll bring with him a record of accomplishment but also lingering resentment over the way his political career ended. He no longer speaks regularly with some onetime allies who pushed him from the race; many in his party blame him for handing the White House to Donald Trump. And he’ll depart amid a strained relationship with his No. 2 and replacement on the ticket, Vice President Kamala Harris.
The capital city that will recede from view as he departs on his helicopter is now the domain of his archrival Trump, whose return to Washington is the very outcome Biden sought most to prevent. Instead of being remembered as an American statesman who vanquished Trump once and for all, as he thought he had after his 2020 victory, he’ll be seen as an interim president between two administrations led by a man he once labeled a fascist and a threat to democracy.
Top Senate Democratic appropriator criticizes Hegseth over not meeting with her
From CNN's Manu Raju
Sen. Patty Murray speaks to reporters in Washington, DC in September 2024.
Piroschka Van De Wouw/Reuters
Washington Sen. Patty Murray, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, says President-elect Donald Trump’s defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth canceled a scheduled meeting with her and rescheduled it to January 26, even though he could be confirmed by then.
Murray’s complaints echo those of many Democrats — including on the Senate Armed Services Committee — who didn’t meet with Hegseth before this week’s hearing.
That is unusual for Cabinet nominees, who typically meet with senators from both parties. Hegseth only met with Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the panel, and Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, who doesn’t sit on the committee, before the hearing.
Murray is also the ranking member on the defense appropriations subcommittee, which is in charge of the Pentagon’s budget.
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Here’s a look at Reagan’s 1985 inauguration — the last time the ceremony was held indoors
From CNN's Shania Shelton
President Ronald Reagan is sworn in during his 1985 inauguration ceremony inside the Capitol Rotunda.
CQ Archive/Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration is set to take place inside the US Capitol Rotunda due to dangerously cold temperatures projected in the nation’s capital.
A presidential inauguration was last held indoors in 1985, when President Ronald Reagan was inaugurated for his second term.
The temperature this Inauguration Day at noon — when the president-elect is sworn in — is expected to be in the low 20s, which is around 20 degrees below normal.
Monday is likely to be the coldest Inauguration Day since 1985, when the daytime temperature dipped to 7 degrees with a windchill of -25.
Reagan took the oath of office at his inaugural ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, while the inaugural ball took place at the Washington Convention Center. His inaugural parade was canceled.
The Beach Boys, Frank Sinatra and Donna Summer were among those who performed at Reagan’s inauguration. Some of the notable attendees included Bob Dole, Elizabeth Dole, George Bush and Barbara Bush.
The noon temperature was 28 degrees for former President Barack Obama’s first inauguration, in 2009.
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TikTok says it will go dark in the US on Sunday unless Biden administration intervenes right away
From CNN's John Fritze, Tierney Sneed, Devan Cole, Pamela Brown, Clare Duffy, Kit Maher, Evan Perez and Brian Stelter
TikTok is seen in the app store on January 8.
Brook Joyner/CNN
TikTok on Friday said that it would turn off more than 170 million Americans’ access to the super popular video app on Sunday, unless President Joe Biden’s administration acts urgently to assure the company it will not be punished for violating the terms of its looming ban.
A bipartisan law, signed by Biden in April, requires TikTok to sell to American buyers by Sunday or face a ban in the United States. The Supreme Court earlier in the day allowed the controversial ban to stand.
The Biden administration has made clear it would leave enforcement of the ban to President-elect Donald Trump, who will be inaugurated on Monday, and a White House official reiterated Friday night that its position on the matter has been sufficiently clear.
While the official did not rule out further action before the Sunday deadline, they said the administration had clearly signaled that it would not penalize service providers like Google and Apple for hosting TikTok on Sunday.
Still, TikTok said that was not enough.
Trump has suggested — but not outright stated — that he will not enforce the ban. He had asked the Supreme Court to stay the ban so his incoming administration could work out a deal to sell TikTok to American buyers. But the Supreme Court rejected an appeal from the app’s owners that claimed the law violated the First Amendment, allowing the ban to take place.
Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social Friday that his inauguration address and accompanying prayers and speeches for the ceremony will instead take place in the US Capitol Rotunda, which was last done in 1985 for the inauguration of Ronald Reagan.
Thousands of people who had tickets to attend the event outdoors will not be able to fit into the new indoor configuration.
It urged would-be spectators to watch at “indoor venues of their choice,” adding that it’s “designating certain places to watch and will provide additional information.” The committee said that those with tickets for the Presidential Platform and members of Congress will be able to attend in person.
Trump has encouraged supporters instead to attend a live viewing of the event at Washington’s Capital One Arena, where he had already planned to hold a rally Sunday night. The president-elect said on Truth Social that he will come to the arena after the inauguration at the Capitol, and that it will host a parade.
The Secret Service and other agencies, including DC and US Capitol Police, are working to determine how moving the inauguration and parade indoors will change security plans for Monday, two law enforcement sources familiar with the planning told CNN on Friday.
Agencies were left with just three days to put together a new security plan that previously took months to assemble.