According to Charleston City Paper, Biden's visit is being viewed as a tribute to the state. This is due to Biden's 2020 president campaign winning a major primary victory in S.C., which propelled him into the Democratic nomination and presidency.
As President Joe Biden’s time in the White House draws to a close, he stopped in South Carolina on Sunday to thank the people who got him there. Biden spent much of his final full day in office in the Lowcountry,
President Biden told a Charleston, South Carolina, congregation, "I'm not going anywhere" and "I'm in no ways tired," on his final full day in office.
President Joe Biden is spending the last full day of his presidency in South Carolina — a state that helped propel him to the White House in 2020.
King Day at the Dome started in 2000 as a protest to the Confederate flag flying over the State House dome and inside both legislative chambers.
Biden is expected to spend his final full day in office in South Carolina, whose Democratic primary in 2020 revived his struggling campaign and propelled him into the White House, before attending ...
President Joe Biden has spent his final full day in office in South Carolina, where he urged Americans to “keep the faith in a better day to come.”
President Joe Biden's time in the White House is drawing to an end, and he wants to spend part of his last day, Sunday, Jan. 19, in none other than South Carolina. Charleston, to be exact.
As Donald Trump returns to the White House, he has built the most formidable foundation of Republican electoral strength since the Ronald Reagan era in the 1980s.
The president cited the disasters during his inauguration speech Monday as examples of an insufficient federal response to communities in need.
The Republican president has criticized former President Joe Biden for his administration's response to Hurricane Helene in North Carolina. As he left the White House, he told reporters that "it's been a horrible thing the way that's been allowed to fester" since the storm hit in September, and "we're going to get it fixed up."
In a wide-ranging interview on Sunday, Vice President JD Vance defended a variety of plans set in motion by President Trump during the first week of his term, including the beginnings of a promised crackdown on migrants living in the United States and an effort to supercharge oil and gas production.