Thousands protested for women's rights, immigration, the environment and more ahead of Donald Trump's inauguration in Washington, D.C.
More than a dozen high-profile faces will be missing from the sea of spectators huddled in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.
The president-elect will host a party at his golf club in Virginia on Saturday, kicking off four days of celebrations.
Trump's second inauguration day will begin with a service at St John's Church, Lafayette Square, a historic Washington DC church, followed by tea at the White House. Musical performances and opening remarks are set to begin at 09:30 EST (14:30 GMT).
Democratic lawmakers who loudly boycotted Trump’s first inauguration say they feel compelled to go this time, while protests are expected to be a fraction of their 2017 size.
The Trump family is set to return to the White House as President-elect Donald Trump is set to take the oath of office for a second time on Inauguration Day, which will be held on Monday, Jan. 20.
WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration ceremony is moving indoors to the Capitol rotunda because of a frigid weather forecast in the nation's capital Monday, the president-elect announced on social media Friday.
The sudden weather-induced change forced a scramble for hundreds of thousands of people who had spent months planning for the swearing-in of the nation’s 47th president.
POLITICO asked the 2017 boycotters what their plans are this time. Their answers reveal a faded resistance movement.
The pageantry and parties surrounding President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration kick off this weekend with fireworks and a rally before Monday’s Inauguration Day ceremony, parade and balls.
The last president to be sworn-in indoors was Ronald Reagan in 1985, when cold weather also plagued the US Capitol.