Iâm just back in and switched on the TV. I missed it. A waste of a few hours for those who did tune in by all accounts.
You got the log in right this time, well done
Oh Mick
Just a vicious, small minded cunt right to the end
What a wanker
Poor Old Quid Pro Quo Joe could be facing impeachment
Youâre not getting the Billion Dollars until the Prosecutor is fired
Looks like a D U P wishlist
Fake news maybe??
âQueer teenagersâ? Surely not real?
President Trump and Melania looking radiant as they disembark from Air Force One in the Florida sun.
Biden putting the US back into the Paris Climate Accord by the end of the day.
The swamp is being drained
The lads seemed to enjoy it.
Donald has half wrecked the Republican party. Letâs hope joe can do the same for the Democrats. What our country needs is to escape from these two giant conglomerates and make a return to politics for the people by the people.
More great news for Bohs supporters
Thank god the former presidents followers didnt interrupt the ceremony. It was truly life affirming.
The whole world is exhaling in unison tonight
As President Joe Biden took his oath of office Wednesday, brining the Trump era to a close after the most tumultuous presidential transition in living memory, world leaders and top officials, along with ordinary people across the globe, looked on with rapt attention, and in many cases cautious optimism.
Some leaders and officials have reached out to embrace the incoming Biden administration, offering congratulations speaking of their hopes for cooperation, especially on issues that fell by the wayside under Trump, such as climate change. Most took a reserved tone, but a few, including among U.S. rivals, were more vociferous.
âGood Riddance, Donald Trump!â Chinaâs state news agency Xinhua wrote on Twitter.
U.K., E.U. leaders congratulate Biden on Inauguration Day
After four years of norm-shattering and often combative U.S. leadership, many world leaders welcomed a new chapter in the United States. âFive years ago, we thought Trump was a bad joke, but five years later we realized he jeopardized nothing less than the worldâs most powerful democracy,â Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Wednesday.
Hereâs how world leaders, top officials and other international figures are reacting to the handover of power in Washington.
Boris Johnson
British prime minister
The British Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted congratulations to Biden and Harris on Wednesday, writing that âAmericaâs leadership is vital on the issues that matter to us allâ and that he looked âforward to working with President Biden.â
Johnson told Parliament earlier Wednesday he welcomed the chance to engage with the incoming Biden administration on âour shared priorities: from tackling climate change, building back better from the pandemic and strengthening our transatlantic security.â
Volodymyr Zelensky
Ukrainian President
President Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted that he had watched the inauguration from his new office in the Ukrainian capital.
âIâll be glad to welcome [Biden] in the well-known Kyiv. Iâm sure our relations will be enhanced,â Zelensky wrote.
Narendra Modi
Indian Prime Minister
The Indian leader wrote a series of messages to Biden on Twitter, offering his âwarmest congratulationsâ and suggesting that they work together to âstrengthen [the] India-US strategic partnership.â
âThe India-US partnership is based on shared values,â Modi wrote. âWe have a substantial and multifaceted bilateral agenda, growing economic engagement and vibrant people to people linkages.â
Benjamin Netanyahu
Israeli Prime Minister
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement that offered congratulations to both Biden and Harris.
âPresident Biden, you and I have had a warm personal friendship going back many decades,â Netanyahu said in the statement. âI look forward to working with you to further strengthen the US-Israel alliance, to continue expanding peace between Israel and the Arab world and to confront common challenges, chief among them the threat posed by Iran.â
Justin Trudeau
Canadian prime minister
In a statement, the Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered a congratulation to Biden and pledged to work together on global issues.
âCanada and the United States enjoy one of the most unique relationships in the world, built on a shared commitment to democratic values, common interests, and strong economic and security ties. Our two countries are more than neighbors â we are close friends, partners, and allies," Trudeau said.
Hua Chunying
Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman
Although Chinese leader Xi Jinping has not spoken on the handover of power, a spokeswoman for Chinaâs Foreign Ministry offered a cautious welcome to the incoming Biden administration on Wednesday, as well as some cutting words for the departing Trump team.
âWe hope the new U.S. administration will work together with China, with mutual respect, properly handle differences and conduct more win-win cooperation in more sectors,â Hua Chunying said at a daily news briefing.
Hua also used the briefing to criticize the Trump administration, and in particular outgoing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, for its decision on Tuesday to label the alleged persecution of Uighurs in China a genocide â a move she dubbed a âpiece of wastepaper.â
Bi-khim Hsiao
Taiwanese envoy to Washington
Bi-khim Hsiao, representative of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in Washington, was among the guests at the Biden inauguration on Wednesday.
âDemocracy is our common language and freedom is our common objection. I look forward to working with the next administration in advancing our mutual values and interest,â Hsiao said in a video message to her Twitter account.
Hsiao serves as Taiwanâs de-facto ambassador to the United States as the two nations do not have formal diplomatic relations.
Simon Coveney
Irish foreign minister
Simon Coveney, who serves in the Irish government as minister for foreign affairs and defense, sent a message of congratulations to Biden on Wednesday, emphasizing the Irish-American politicianâs family history and suggest a visit to Ireland.
âWe hope to welcome him to his ancestral home early in his Presidency,â Coveney tweeted. âHe has always been a friend to Ireland & we look forward to working with him on strengthening Irish/US relations & much more.â
Coveney also congratulated Vice President Harris on âher historic achievement as she is inaugurated as the first woman, and first woman of colour, to hold the office of US Vice President.â
Emmanuel Macron
French president
French President Emmanuel Macron said he hoped that Biden would show a greater military commitment than Trump did to the fight against Islamist extremists around the world, especially in the Middle East.
In a speech on Tuesday to the French military in Brest, in western France, he said, âI am certain that in the coming weeks, the new administration [Biden] will need to make key decisions that will mark a greater commitment and awareness in the fight against terrorismâ in Syria and Iraq.
Pedro Sanchez
Spanish Prime Minister
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said the inauguration of Biden ârepresents the victory of democracy over the ultra-right and its three methods, the massive deception, the national division and the abuse, even violent, of democratic institutions.â
âFive years ago, we thought Trump was a bad joke, but five years later we realized he jeopardized nothing less than the worldâs most powerful democracy,â said Sanchez, who was speaking at a public event in Madrid.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier
German president
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was ârelievedâ that Biden is being sworn in Wednesday.
âI know that this feeling is shared by many people in Germany,â he said in a video message, calling it a âgood day for democracy.â
âDespite all the joy we have about today, we must not forget that populism has seduced the most powerful democracy in the world,â he continued.
Vladimir Putin
Russian president
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov shrugged off any differences under a Biden White House, which is expected to take a tougher line with Moscow.
While Trump carefully avoided criticizing President Vladimir Putin, Biden has called him a âKGB thugâ and has described Russia as the greatest threat to the United States.
âNothing will change for Russia. Russia will continue to live just the way it has lived for hundreds of years, seeking good relations with the U.S.,â Peskov said Wednesday. âWhether Washington has reciprocal political will for that will depend on Mr. Biden and his team.â
Putin was one of the last world leaders to congratulate Biden on his election win, sending a telegram only after the electoral college vote and citing the torrent of legal challenges mounted by Trump. Nor did Putin follow up with a phone call. âNo, not yet. You know that theyâre having some problems there in the United States, and so theyâre definitely dealing with their own problems at home now,â Peskov said about future phone calls.
Ursula von der Leyen
President of the European Commission
In televised remarks on Wednesday, the leaders of the European Union greeted Bidenâs impending inauguration with joy and relief, as one declared that the United States was rejoining âthe circle of like-minded states.â
âIt will be a message of hope for a world that is waiting for the U.S. to be back in the circle of like-minded states,â European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament. âThis new dawn in America is the moment we have been waiting for, for so long.â
Greta Thunberg
Swedish climate activist
Greta Thunberg, a teenage climate activist from Sweden, offered a mocking goodbye for Trump on Wednesday morning, referencing the message the president had written about her in Sept. 2019 after she was named Time Magazineâs Person of the Year.
âHe seems like a very happy old man looking forward to a bright and wonderful future," Thunberg wrote next to a photograph of Trump leaving the White House. âSo nice to see!â
Hassan Rouhani
Iranian president
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani expressed hope Wednesday that Biden would reverse Trumpâs withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
âThe ball is in the court of Washington today â if they return to their commitments, we will also fulfill our commitments,â he said in televised remarks. He added that Trumpâs âpolitical life is over, but the JCPOA is alive â he made his utmost efforts to eliminate the deal, but he failed.â
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has also indicated his support for Iranâs return to the nuclear deal once Biden takes office but has also insisted that the United States is not to be trusted, no matter who is in power.
Scott Morrison
Australian prime minister
Australian leader Scott Morrison said Tuesday that he hopes the incoming U.S. administration could lead to unity in the country following last yearâs disputed election and the aftermath.
âAmerica is going through a very terrible time at the moment, but [Iâm] looking forward to the country uniting and moving on from these terrible last few months and particularly these last few weeks,â he told 2GB Radio on Tuesday.
In the interview, Morrison also said the scenes at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 were âterribleâ but that he did not want to lecture another country and its leaders.
NicolĂĄs Maduro
Venezuelan president
A key ally to Venezuelan President NicolĂĄs Maduro said Friday that he hoped there could be dialogue between Washington and Caracas after Biden takes office, and that the incoming U.S. leader could pull back sanctions imposed during the Trump administration.
âThe entire world is waiting out the hours for when the new president assumes the office in the United States,â Jorge RodrĂguez, the leader of Venezuelaâs National Assembly, said in an interview with the Associated Press. âWe hope that includes abandoning whatâs has been so harmful to the people of Venezuela and completely unproductive.â