This is certainly not the year Trump envisioned, when considering dismissal, Covid-19, an election failure "engulfed" the White House boss.

2020 has begun with President Donald Trump entangled in a month-long recall review process that focuses on his pressure campaign with the Ukrainian president to investigate the father and son of the former vice president.

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The moment when Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (white shirt) tore a copy of the Federal Message at Capitol Hill on the evening of February 4 Photo: NYTimes.

Looking back is probably still an easy time for Trump this year.

Parole guaranteed by the US Senate controlled by the Republican, President Trump used the Message of the Union itself to declare a second term.

The Democratic-led House of Representatives opened an investigation to consider dismissing Trump in September 2019 and moved two terms considering dismissing Trump to the Senate in January.

After that, President Trump returned to the campaign and regularly visited the states where Democrats held primary elections.

The difficulty of considering a dismissal subsided was also when Trump faced a wave of Covid-19 attacking America.

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President Trump holds a photographic bible at a church near the White House on June 1 Photo: NYTimes.

The press conferences of the anti-Covid-19 task force were originally presided over by Vice President Mike Pence.

In April, Trump tweeted "liberate Michigan!", "Liberate Minnesota!", To encourage protesters to protest against Democratic governors to impose anti-epidemic restrictions.

After George Floyd, a colored man who died of being held by the Minneapolis police for nearly nine minutes, a wave of anti-racist protests spread across America.

Trump's campaign inflated a campaign in Tulsa, Oklahoma in June. Although the campaign claimed nearly a million people had signed up, President Trump had to address an association.

When he gave a speech at Mount Rushmore just before the July 4 national day, President Trump started a cultural war by accusing US protesters of carrying out "cruel campaign to wipe the country's history"

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President Trump (left) and Joe Biden in the first debate in Cleveland, Ohio on September 29 Photo: NYTimes.

Although Trump repeatedly insists that "nCoV will disappear," many states in the US are seeing new infections surge again.

This has increased criticism of Trump's handling of the pandemic.

After two re-locations for the Republican National Congress (RNC), President Trump in August finally decided to give his reelection speech on the lawn south of the White House.

Trump's election campaign asserted hosting top political events on government property sector does not violate the Hatch Act.

The day after Supreme Court Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed away in September, Trump and Sen. Mitch McConnell, the leader of the Senate majority, contacted Judge Amy Coney Barrett about her nomination.

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President Trump at the White House on October 5 evening after leaving the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Photo: NYTimes.

President Trump hosted a formal nomination announcement ceremony at the White House the following weekend attended by Judge Barrett, his family, and Republican lawmakers.

During his first debate with Biden in late September, Trump repeatedly interrupted Biden almost every time the Democratic candidate spoke.

Less than 48 hours after the debate, Trump tweeted that he and First Lady Melania were positive for nCoV.

When he returned to the White House, Trump continued to send the message "don't be afraid of nCoV" to the American people.

Health experts criticized the President's message as "dangerous" because it encouraged his supporters to ignore basic recommendations to keep themselves safe.

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President Trump at the White House Oval Office on December 3 Photo: NYTimes.

Trump has returned to the campaign after recovering.

Trump's advisers convinced him to moderate himself in the remaining presidential debates.

Eight days before the election, Trump won a confirmation for his 3rd Supreme Court judge nomination.

President Trump was running "at full capacity" in the final days of the campaign.

The defeat against Joe Biden and the legal battle over the election results showing no signs of ending is closing a year "want to forget" of Trump.

"President Trump increasingly ran out of options and with each passing week, he started talking more as if he knew he had failed," said Amber Phillips, an analyst at the Washington Post.