The first (and chaotic) debate

The first televised debate between President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden became heated.

In the American media, the meeting was even described as a total failure with about 100 interruptions, of which Trump accounted for the majority.

"An exhausting screaming party," Fox News said afterwards.

Trump meets Black lives matter protests with PR image and bible

In late May, black American George Floyd was killed during a police intervention in Minneapolis, which was the starting point for widespread protests around the United States.

As the demonstrations and riots grew larger in June, Donald Trump chose, with the Bible in hand, to pose outside St. John's Church, which had burned in connection with protests the night before.

A move that the president's opponents sharply criticized.

Liberal judge in the Supreme Court dies - in the middle of a burning election campaign

In late September, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a liberal judge in the US Supreme Court, dies.

She is replaced by Conservative lawyer Amy Coney Barrett.

She is the third judge to be appointed by Donald Trump to the Supreme Court, which is described as one of his biggest political victories during his tenure as judges.

The Democrats, who believe that the mother of seven can, among other things, pose a threat to the abortion law, protested.

Donald Trump gets covid-19

Donald Trump has in several speeches toned down the severity of covid-19 - in early October he himself suffered from the disease.

How sick the president, who was both mocked and honored after he was infected, actually was, only the closest circle knows.

It is clear, however, that he was able to leave the hospital after only a few days.

And it was not long before the president, who rarely wears a mouth guard, was out campaigning again.

Hunter Biden's laptop on fan - or?

In October, the New York Post publishes a revelation about Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden's business in Ukraine.

The information is said to come from a laptop that Hunter Biden handed in for repair, but the credibility of the article is questioned and it is also stopped by both Facebook and Twitter.

What is true and what is not clear, but the alleged deal is still used as a political bat during the last trembling weeks before the presidential election.