President Joe Biden traveled to South Carolina, the state that helped catapult him to the White House, on his final full day in office.
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 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.
President Joe Biden’s ties to SC includes relationships with Senator Strom Thurmond and Rep. Jim Clyburn, and visits to Columbia, Charleston and Kiawah Island.
President Joe Biden will spend his last full day in office in South Carolina, the state that helped solidify his bid for the White House in 2020. President Biden and
Joe Biden's final trip on Air Force One as president is to Charleston, South Carolina on Sunday, January 19, 2025.
The president cited the disasters during his inauguration speech Monday as examples of an insufficient federal response to communities in need.
Joe Biden traveled to South Carolina on Sunday, his last full day as US president, where he urged Americans to "keep the faith in a better day to come" as he marked the national holiday honoring civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.
The President shared a heart-warming photograph from his official POTUS handle, featuring a smiling couple posing together in front of the White House.
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.
President Trump named voter identification laws as a requirement for California before he would release disaster relief to the state amid ongoing wildfires.