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 Diet Coke button returned to Donald Trump's Oval Office, offering the president immediate access to his favorite soda beverage.
At 78, Donald Trump is a teetotaler. However, he is reported to drink 12 cans of Diet Coke every day. However, this low-sugar, low-calorie form of drink is known to trigger heart diseases, decrease bone density etc.
In the 2019 book, Team of Vipers, written by former White House aide Chris Sims, the use of the button was explained in more detail. Chris described how Donald Trump would suddenly press the Diet Coke button, leaving his guests in a slight state of panic before a butler would enter with the drink on a silver platter.
Donald Trump's beloved soda button is back and ready for four more years of thirst quenching with just a push.
Donald Trump 2.0 is, so far, very much the same as his first go around. But eight years after he was last sworn into office, the new Republican president is emboldened, far more experienced and surrounded by a very different team.
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.
A tray of pens was also ready for Trump to kick off his slew of extreme executive orders, among them renaming the Gulf of Mexico to Golf of America, and departing the World Health Organization (WHO) as well as the Paris Agreement, which legally binds nations to combat climate change.
Donald Trump has had a button which automatically requests a glass of Diet Coke reinstalled at the Oval Office. The move was reportedly one of the first things Trump, 78, did upon his return to ...
Joe Biden’s blue rug was swapped for Trump’s neutral-coloured one as part of a switch from the outgoing president’s belongings to the incoming one’s, and Trump’s infamous red Diet Coke button reportedly was back in place by as early as mid-afternoon on inauguration day.
That has left Trump more emboldened than ever — and with a long to-do list. He’s launched into a frenetic pace of appearances that is a dramatic departure from his predecessor, Joe Biden, who often faded from public view by his own staff’s design.