How Trump left the White House?

Trump and successful first lady Melania Trump left the White House in the early hours of 20th January at 8:20 a.m., strolled through an honorary driveway and onto the South Lawn, boarding the Marine One helicopter.

Trump had envisioned a garish military farewell that took more of the show of tyrants than the serene ceremonies of the common government's American election. Eventually, "Hail to the Chief" was played by a military band and cannons ended in salute, but at Joint Base Andrews, only an unassuming horde of a few hundred associates and assorted supporters appeared to see him off.

America has been more fragmented in Trump's four years in office than at any other stage in late history, prodded, to some degree, by the incendiary manner of the president speaking to his political opponents and to staff, minorities, ladies and various gatherings.

"We know we are great, America is great and you are great, We love you and we will be back here to make America great again" Trump chanted in his typical style while waving to a small gathering sending him off the White House.

Who else left ?

Active White House staff head Mark Meadows, senior arrangement lawyer Stephen Miller, former White House doctor and now Rep. Ronny L. Jackson were among the guests. The three favored Republicans who had served most intimately with him were discernibly absent from Trump's farewell: Vice President Mike Pence, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Trump admitted exculpates early Wednesday morning to 143 people, including former White House planner Stephen K. Bannon and other much-related superstars, as well as nonviolent drug wrongdoers, in one of his last goes around as president. But, because of his benefit in doing so, Trump ultimately did not acquit himself or individuals from his immediate family preemptively.

A stifled Trump told correspondents that serving had been a truly amazing "honor."  "We did what we came here to do — thus considerably more," he said.

Broken traditions:

In modern America, Trump became the only president to blacklist inauguration. Furthermore, as he kept stewing on his political decision misfortune, he would resist several other representative passing-of-the-light conventions involving the serene change of force, but he abandoned a note for Biden which was quoted by Biden as “A decent letter indeed”.

Image: Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP Photo

Dan Blake
The Gawker Contributor since 2020
New York