Body language expert Mark Bowden explains to the Irish Star how Kamala Harris felt while Donald Trump attacked the last presidential administration in his speech.
On the final Friday of her vice-presidency, Kamala Harris partook in one last ritual. She looked disbelievingly as she walked into her ceremonial office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, across the street from the White House,
After President Donald Trump’s 2025 inauguration, former Vice President Kamala Harris traveled back to California on a flight operated by an all-female U.S. Air Force crew.
Harris, born in Oakland, California, in 1964, is a natural-born U.S. citizen under the 14th Amendment, which grants citizenship to anyone born on U.S. soil.
Body language expert Mark Bowden has analysed Kamala Harris' movements during her statement at former President Donald Trump's inauguration
For her final appearance as Vice President, Kamala Harris returned to the codes that defined her professional style over the course of the Biden-Harris administration. Harris attended a customary stop on President Donald Trump's second Inauguration Day on Jan.
In some ways, running for governor of her home state of California seems like an obvious next act for Vice President Kamala Harris when she leaves office this week after narrowly losing a brutal presidential campaign to Donald Trump. The timing is right ...
After four years in the spotlight and the shortest presidential campaign in US history, Kamala Harris faces an unclear political future.
“President Jimmy Carter loved our country,” Harris wrote in her post. “He lived his faith, served the people, and left the world better than he found it.” The potential snub of Trump drew immediate backlash on social media.
Monica De La Cruz of Texas about securing a second term and how she believes Donald Trump’s border policies impacted voters in the 2024 election. Despite Kamala Harris' loss, pro-abortion rights ...
A federal judge has temporarily blocked a Trump administration freeze on federal grants and loans that could total trillions of dollars and cause disruptions in health care research, education programs and other initiatives.
What’s happening now in Washington, DC, is different from most presidential transitions − in volume, pace, content and breadth of the changes ordered.