Military parade rolls through DC
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D.C. onlookers line streets for Trump military parade
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Donald Trump threw a military parade in honor of the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary on Saturday, June 14 (a date that happens to be the president’s birthday) to the tune of $25 to $45 million. But unfortunately for Trump, photos and videos from the big day show sparse attendance and a lack of organization from top to bottom.
Fox News abruptly cut off its interview with Rebekah Koffler after she launched off on an incoherent tangent about Donald Trump's military parade.
President Trump is hosting a parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army today, bringing tanks and soldiers to the streets of Washington, D.C., for the capital's first major military parade in more than three decades.
Thousands of demonstrators crowded into streets, parks, and plazas across the US, blaring anti-authoritarian chants mixed with support for protecting democracy and immigrant rights.
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LAist on MSNSaturday's military parade will be the first in D.C. since 1991's Victory CelebrationThe last time the United States held a national military parade was in June 1991, timed to welcome returning veterans of the 100-day Persian Gulf War.
The demonstrations follow more than a week of large-scale protests in Los Angeles against Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown and his decision to deploy the military there. Thousands gathered at Liberty Plaza,
Republican Senator Rand Paul says President Donald Trump’s military parade would be more at home in Soviet-era Russia.
The parade commemorates the formal founding of the US Army on June 14, 1775, but the White House has provided an answer to speculations about whether Pakistan Field Marshal Asim Munir was invited to the event.