After Joe Biden took office in 2021, reports emerged that he had removed the Diet Coke button from the presidential desk. However, with Trump back in the Oval Office, the button has returned to its rightful place, a symbol of his long-standing devotion to the soda.
The Diet Coke button returned to Donald Trump's Oval Office, offering the president immediate access to his favorite soda beverage.
President Trump reinstalls the famous Diet Coke button on the Oval Office desk, along with other personalized changes marking his return to the White House.
The button President Donald Trump used to order Diet Coke during his first term has returned to the Oval Office.
President Donald Trump has reinstalled a button on the Oval Office desk that alerts White House staff when he wants a fresh can of Diet Coke.
President Donald Trump has restored his famed Diet Coke button to the Oval Office to easily order his favorite drink at his heart’s content. The red button inside a wooden box was already on the Resolute Desk by mid-afternoon on Inauguration Day waiting for Trump,
Constitution’s politics team, I spent four days in the nation’s capital speaking with Georgians and documenting the historic event. Here’s what I saw. Presidential inaugurations are typically held on the west front of the U.
The revamped White House Oval Office will once again feature the Diet Coke button that President Trump used to summon sodas during his first term. The famous little red button, hidden inside a wooden box, was spotted on Trump’s resolute desk after his inauguration ceremony on Monday, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The commemorative Diet Coke bottle features its signature gray wrapping ... but a limited number of bottles will be distributed at the inaugural event" on January 20 in Washington DC. The delivery of this commemorative bottle by Coca-Cola underscores ...
JD Vance shared a story about one of his recent encounters with president Donald Trump after his return to the White House, in an interview with Fox News' Sean Hannity
The marathon Q&A sessions are back, along with the cream Oval Office rug and the Diet Coke button on the Resolute Desk. So, too, are the late-night social media posts that
In the morning, a jumbotron livestreamed the inaugural events. Supporters cheered and booed as they saw politicians they recognized. One attendee, above, made a thumbs-down gesture when former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appeared on camera.