"Where are the big-time A-listers that are conservative in country music?" Rich asked in a video shared on social media.
Carrie Underwood might not be Beyoncé or Garth Brooks in the celebrity superstar ecosystem. But the singer’s participation in President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration is nevertheless a sign of the changing tides.
Patrick Healy, the deputy Opinion editor, hosted an online conversation with the Times Opinion columnists David Brooks, Ross Douthat and Michelle Goldberg about Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration on Monday and the first 100 days of the new Trump administration.
President-elect Trump is set to promise a “new era of national success” in his inaugural address, according to The Wall Street Journal. “I return to the presidency confident and optimistic that we
Preach it. Well Rich has found support from one of his fellow country artists, with Travis Tritt joining his call to other artists to speak out and publicly support Trump:
Carrie Underwood will perform at Donald Trump’s inauguration next week ... who have sang during the swearing-in ceremony. Garth Brooks sang “Amazing Grace” at Joe Biden’s inauguration ...
Churchill once implied that history would be kind to him because “I propose to write that history myself.” As we know from his paroxysms on Truth Social, Donald Trump is barely capable of writing a single coherent sentence.
I never thought that my column this week would be about anything other than the Inauguration of America’s 47 th president, Donald J. Trump, and his visionary quest to bring America into a Golden Age.
President Donald Trump gives the details about his nonconsecutive terms and what it's like to be in the White House for a second time on "Hannity."
His second inaugural address promised a “golden age,” but the ideas in it evoked the late 1800s more than any recent presidency.
Restored to power, President Trump claimed that God put him there and asserted the right to single-handedly redraw the world map as he sees fit.