States could have the choice whether to change the clocks and adhere to daylight saving time under a new bill introduced in Congress this week by Utah Rep. Celeste Maloy.
President Trump on Thursday indicated he would not push for an end to daylight saving time, or to make daylight saving time permanent, suggesting the public was too evenly split on the issue. “It’s a 50/50 issue,
President Donald Trump indicated Thursday he may not push to end daylight saving time as Americans get ready to spring forward this weekend.
Donald Trump has made his thoughts on Daylight Saving Time clear, calling it “ inconvenient ” and “very costly to our Nation” in posts on Truth Social last year. He pledged previously to do away with the time change,
Just when you thought the daylight saving time debate couldn't get any more interesting, enter Donald Trump with his signature plot twist. The former president has gone from calling time changes "very costly to our Nation" to shrugging it off as a "50-50 issue" faster than you can reset your microwave clock.
President Donald Trump said when something is as “50-50” as daylight saving time, it’s “hard to get excited about” changing it.
In the past, Donald Trump spoke about the possibility of ending daylight saving time altogether, and it looks like we have a definitive answer on whether he'll executive order that or not. President Trump on getting rid of Daylight Savings Time: pic.twitter.com/S1VMQIwjGs
We're springing forward on Sunday, so we'll be getting more sunlight. President Trump has previously talked about getting rid of Daylight Saving Time,. Now, he says he understands arguments from both sides.
President Donald Trump is not convinced of changing the current daylight saving time system, calling it a “50-50 issue” even as the modification has been floated by one of his top advisers. On Sunday morning,