President-elect Donald Trump moves inauguration indoors, citing frigid temperatures President-elect Donald Trump announced Friday that he will move the inauguration ceremony indoors as Washington, DC prepares for record low temperatures. The ceremony will now take place inside the Capitol rotunda. Lexie Schapitl
Trump's inauguration falls on MLK Day. That overlap is pretty rare Trump is only the third president to be sworn in on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Due to the particulars of the calendar and the Constitution, the two events won't overlap again until 2053. Rachel Treisman
Biden's Medicaid director shares lessons learned and concerns for the program's future Dan Tsai discusses how he ran Medicaid under Biden, and his fears for how Republicans might try to change the program. Dan Gorenstein
The Jackpod: Throughline On Point news analyst Jack Beatty on Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on federal charges against Donald Trump for election interference in 2020; what has changed since then and what has not.
Biden says the Equal Rights Amendment is law. What happens next is unclear To come into effect, the constitutional amendment would need to be formally published or certified by the national archivist, who has declined to do so in the past. What happens now is unclear. Danielle Kurtzleben
Democrats pour into Washington state as Republicans leave, analysis shows Washington voters shifted toward Donald Trump less than any state in last year's election. A big reason could be: who's moving here, and who's moving out. Scott Greenstone
The surprising reason why the Park Service won't count folks at Trump's inauguration The National Park Service stays out of the debates about crowd sizes — including for President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration. Tamara Keith
What's next for Kamala Harris Inauguration Day marks the first time in more than 20 years that Kamala Harris will not be in public office. "It is not my nature to go quietly into the night," she told allies on Thursday. Deepa Shivaram
Biden shortens sentences for nearly 2,500 people, setting a record Democratic lawmakers had urged President Biden to use his clemency powers to address disparities in sentences for offenses involving crack cocaine. Lexie Schapitl