President Trump: The Inauguration and his first 100 days - Media Centre

President Trump: The Inauguration and his first 100 days

BBC News coverage and special programming across TV, radio and online

Published: 13 January 2017

The inauguration of President-Elect Donald Trump will be broadcast live for UK audiences across TV, radio and online on Friday 20 January.

Anchored by the BBC’s Katty Kay from Capitol Hill in Washington DC, BBC One (4-6pm) and BBC News Channel (3-7pm) will follow the official proceedings on Inauguration day, including the swearing in ceremony, the inaugural address as well as the presidential parade to the White House. In addition to covering events in America the BBC will also be gauging reaction from around the world to a day which marks the transfer of Presidential power from one administration to the next and analysing the significance of this transition to the wider international community.

James Naughtie will be covering all aspects of the President’s inauguration live on BBC Radio 4; BBC Radio 5 Live and World Service Radio will also broadcast live.

There will be live updates on BBC News Online from 11am and throughout the day, with analysis from BBC reporters in Washington and around the world in the build up to the ceremony, the parade and the entertainment outside the White House. There will be a live stream of the ceremony including the new President’s speech.

Alongside the live coverage on BBC News Online there will be background video and text features providing audiences with everything they need to know about the day, from background explainers on the inauguration ceremony and its history, to looking at who’ll be attending, performing and what President Trump says he’ll do once in office. The BBC’s digital coverage will also include analysis of the new President’s speech from the BBC’s Anthony Zurcher, plus an annotated video of the speech.

The BBC will be live tweeting, hosting Facebook lives and producing live stories for Instagram and SnapChat on the inauguration and the crowds.

A range of other BBC programmes will have special programming marking the inauguration including BBC Breakfast, Newsnight and Panorama.

After the inauguration BBC News will continue to report on the key developments and from Monday 23 January a new programme will cover the President’s first 100 days in office.

100 Days
BBC News Channel and BBC Four, Monday 23 January until April (Mon-Thu), 7pm

As the new administration takes office, Katty Kay from Washington and Christian Fraser from London will report and provide analysis from around the world on President Trump’s first 100 days in power and the events that are shaping our world.

Panorama - Trump: The Kremlin Candidate?
BBC One, Monday 16 January, 8.30pm

In the week of the new President's inauguration, Panorama reports on Russia’s role in Donald Trump’s election victory and asks what’s behind the relationship between Vladimir Putin and Trump. Reporter John Sweeney – who has met and challenged both men - travels to Moscow and the United States to find out how sure we can be that Russian cyber warriors influenced the US election and if there’s any truth to claims that Russian intelligence has compromising material about the President elect. And from Lithuania and the battlefields of Ukraine, he investigates what this will mean for security in Europe and the rest of the world.

EJ

There will be live coverage of the inauguration of President Elect Donald Trump across the BBC’s international news services on TV, radio and online on 20 January, 2017.

The 24/7 global news network BBC World News TV will begin coverage from 14:00 GMT on 20th January, along with full news and analysis throughout the day on BBC.com, the BBC News app, social media outlets and on BBC World Service radio.

BBC News will also be launching a new weekday TV news show on Monday 23 January – 100 Days – as the new administration takes office in Washington, to follow the first three months of the President’s term in the White House.

On TV

Presented live by the BBC’s Katty Kay from atop the Newseum, the BBC will follow the official proceedings on Inauguration Day, including the swearing in ceremony, the inaugural address, as well as the presidential parade to the White House. Along with following events in Washington DC the BBC will also be gauging reaction from around the world to a day which marks the transfer of Presidential power from one administration to the next and analysing the significance of this transition to the wider international community.

New weekday TV show charts first 100 days of new Presidency

Following the inauguration, BBC News will be launching 100 Days on Monday 23 January on BBC World News, broadcasting Monday to Thursday at 19:00 GMT. Presented from Washington by the BBC’s Katty Kay, alongside the BBC’s Christian Fraser in London, the programme will be following the first 100 days of the new President’s administration, with analysis and perspective from around the world.

Digital coverage

For digital audiences, live updates on BBC.com begin from 11:00 GMT and run throughout the day, with analysis from the BBC’s team across Washington and around the world in the build up to the ceremony, the parade and the entertainment outside the White House. There will be a live stream of the ceremony including the new President’s speech.

Alongside the live coverage on BBC.com, there will be background video and text features providing global audiences with everything they need to know about the day, from background explainers on the inauguration ceremony and its history, to looking at who’ll be attending and performing (and who won’t) and what President Trump says he’ll do once in office. The BBC’s digital coverage will also include text analysis of the new President’s speech from the BBC’s Anthony Zurcher, plus an annotated video of the speech.

Other digital highlights include a new video feature which follows Trump supporters on their journey to Washington and also hears from protesters travelling to the capital for a march the day after. The BBC will look at this culture clash and ask if President Trump has any chance of uniting the nation. An interactive feature will compare how the new President’s inauguration visually compares to President Obama’s in 2008. The venue and the oath are the same but the size and make-up of the crowd may differ. Using images taken from the same spot, this interactive feature on BBC.com will allow audiences to compare the two different inauguration ceremonies side by side.

The BBC will also be hosting special Facebook Lives and Snapchat updates with the BBC’s Rajini Vaidyanathan.

Radio

For BBC World Service radio, BBC Newshour at 14:00 GMT will have live reports from Washington DC, followed by three hours of continuous coverage of events from 16:00 GMT to 19:00. There will be an extended edition of Newshour from 19:00 GMT, with the BBC’s correspondents in Washington and around the world gauging the national and international reaction.

The main host of the radio coverage from Washington will be the BBC’s Nuala McGovern overlooking proceedings from the roof of the Canadian Embassy. The BBC’s Chloe Tilly will be with the crowds on Pennsylvania Avenue and Aleem Maqbool will be providing commentary from his vantage point near the steps of Congress. In addition Shaimaa Khalil will be in West Virginia reporting on how Middle America is following the inauguration of President Trump.

As well as full coverage on the day, BBC World Service radio will also be broadcasting daily from different venues across America in the week leading up to the inauguration to look at how people are remembering President Obama and looking ahead to the Trump era.

HM3