Skip to Content
Categories:

A Look Back at 2025

For many of us, 2025 has been a whirlwind of a year. From changing presidential administrations to worldwide protests, let’s take a look at what the past year had to offer us.
January 20 – To kick off the year, we welcomed Donald Trump back into the White House as the 47th President of the United States. Inaugurated on January 20, Trump is the second president to have served two non-consecutive terms. Throughout his second term, Trump has advocated for and implemented “America First” policies, including immigration crackdowns and the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign, which is intended as a healthcare reform for the United States.

Photo Credit: Morry Gash / Pool / AFP / Getty Images
January 20 – To kick off the year, we welcomed Donald Trump back into the White House as the 47th President of the United States. Inaugurated on January 20, Trump is the second president to have served two non-consecutive terms. Throughout his second term, Trump has advocated for and implemented “America First” policies, including immigration crackdowns and the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign, which is intended as a healthcare reform for the United States. Photo Credit: Morry Gash / Pool / AFP / Getty Images

The following article contains sensitive content, including images of casualties, mass destruction, protests, and discussion of these topics. Viewer discretion is advised.

Photographs and information for this article were pulled from CNN’s 2025: The year in pictures showcase, as well as associated articles. Months are presented with an American event first, then a global event.

 

January 20 – To kick off the year, we welcomed Donald Trump back into the White House as the 47th President of the United States. Inaugurated on January 20, Trump is the second president to have served two non-consecutive terms. Throughout his second term, Trump has advocated for and implemented “America First” policies, including immigration crackdowns and the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign, which is intended as a healthcare reform for the United States.
Photo Credit: Morry Gash / Pool / AFP / Getty Images

 

January 19 (Photo taken June 10) – Emily Damari, left, is an Israeli citizen who was released from Palestine by Hamas as part of a ceasefire agreement. She was taken from Israel as a hostage with 250 other people on October 7th, 2023. 1,200 people were killed in the same attack. At the time of her release, she had spent over 470 days trapped in Gaza.
Photo Credit: Avishag Shaar-Yashuv / The New York Times / Redux

 

February 3 – In the aftermath of the January Palisades wildfire in California, the Pacific Palisades neighborhood in Los Angeles is reduced to rubble. The Palisades wildfire was one of the most destructive wildfires in Southern California history.
Photo Credit: Brontë Wittpenn / San Francisco Chronicle / Getty Images

 

February 4 – The city of Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, suffered up to 2,000 casualties after the city was captured by M23 rebels who were fighting against the Congolese army. Volunteers buried the bodies of those who were killed in a mass grave.
Photo Credit: Guerchom Ndebo / The New York Times / Redux

 

March 15 – In El Salvador, hundreds of Venezuelan deportees arrive from the United States, many of them alleged gang members. Though a court ruling was meant to prevent wartime powers from being used, the Trump administration invoked them anyway to speed up the mass deportations.
Photo Credit: Philip Holsinger / Redux

 

March 14 – Former Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, resigned from office. His successor, Mark Carney, was sworn in on the same day. Trudeau is pictured here while carrying his chair from the House of Commons in Ottawa.
Photo Credit: Carlos Osorio / Reuters

 

April 13 – Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro’s family residence was damaged in an act of arson after a 38-year-old man set it ablaze with a homemade Molotov Cocktail. The man was charged with attempted homicide, aggravated arson, and terrorism among a string of other crimes. In October, he was sentenced to up to 50 years in prison after pleading guilty.
Photo Credit: Commonwealth Media Services

 

April 23 – Cardinals gather around Pope Francis, who died of a stroke and heart failure on April 21. He was laid in state in St. Peter’s Basilica for mourners to pay their respects. Pope Francis was the first Latin American pope, hailing from Buenos Aires, Argentina, and the first non-European pope in centuries.
Photo Credit: Stefano Spaziani / Mondadori Portfolio / Vatican Pool / Getty Images

 

May 18 – The central United States was ripped apart by a storm system that led to violent tornadoes, destroying homes and taking lives. In Missouri and southeastern Kentucky, 25 people were killed as a result of the violent weather.
Photo Credit: Michael Swensen / Getty Images

 

May 8 – The Catholic Church successfully elected a new pope following the death of Pope Francis in April. In a secret chamber where all cardinals under 80 cast their ballots, white smoke marked the successful end of a 33-hour conclave – short in comparison to other conclaves in the past. Pope Leo XIV is the first American pope, and the second from the continental Americas.
Photo Credit: Alessio Paduano for CNN

 

June 8 – Protests erupted in downtown Los Angeles following the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration. Law enforcement, including members of the National Guard, were called in to help deal with the crisis. Protesters are reflected in the visor of an enforcer’s helmet as they look on.
Photo Credit: Gabriela Bhaskar / The New York Times / Redux

 

June 4 – The war in Ukraine still rages on, four years later. In the Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukrainian forces continue their assault on Russian drones through the use of antiaircraft weapons, such as the one pictured here. The civilian death toll in Ukraine has risen to over 14,900 since Russia launched the war.
Photo Credit: Tyler Hicks / The New York Times / Redux

 

July 5 – One day after the disaster at Camp Mystic, the 25 girls and 2 counselors killed in a flood caused by the Guadalupe River have left behind empty cabins, filled with sediment washed in by the water. The Christian summer camp in Hunt, Texas faced lawsuits regarding negligence and failure to adequately prepare for a major weather event.
Photo Credit: Ronaldo Schmeidt / AFP / Getty Images

 

July 3 – Aboard the International Space Station, Nichole Ayers snapped a photo of a lightning sprite as the ISS was over Mexico and the United States. Ayers, a NASA astronaut, said that lightning sprites are Transient Luminous Events that actually happen above the clouds.
Photo Credit: Nichole Ayers / NASA

 

August 27 – A 2017 graduate of the Annunciation Catholic School opened fire on the establishment, killing two students and injuring eighteen people. The shooting happened during a Mass ceremony that marked the beginning of the new school year. Pictured is a parent running barefoot towards the school to find her child, having been notified of the shooting.
Photo Credit: Richard Tsong-Taatarii / The Star Tribune / Getty Images

 

August 6 – Argentina’s president, Javier Milei, vetoed a bill that would have raised pensions and provided protection for people with disabilities on August 4. Just days later, protesters gathered in Argentina’s capitol, Buenos Aires, in opposition to the president.
Photo Credit: Agustin Marcarian / Reuters

 

September 16 – Luigi Mangione, suspected of killing the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, Brian Thompson, arrives for a New York court hearing. He faces a charge of second-degree murder, though terror-related murder charges against Mangione have been dropped.
Photo Credit: Mike Segar / Reuters

 

September 18 – Anti-austerity protests, or opposition to federal financial cuts, took place across France as President Emmanuel Macron and Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu’s plans for fiscal spending snowballed in unpopularity. France also faced a government collapse in September after former Prime Minister François Bayrou was ousted, and again in October with Lecornu’s resignation.
Photo Credit: Miguel Medina / AFP / Getty Images

 

October 28 – The government shut down for 43 days in 2025, making it the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Stretching from October 1 – the start of the fiscal year – to November 12, the shutdown was fueled by Democrats’ continued blocking of Republican bills. Its consequences included lack of pay for 1.4 million government workers, and SNAP benefits faltering for low-income households.
Photo Credit: Kylie Cooper / Reuters

 

October 15 – An intersection in Gaza City, like most around it, lies in ruin as citizens walk through it. 2025 offered a brief ceasefire beginning in January, though March brought a missile strike issued by Israel that killed 400 people, ending the ceasefire. The Gaza Ministry of Health has reported that since the war’s beginning, nearly 65,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces.
Photo Credit: AP

 

November 4 – Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani celebrates winning New York City’s mayoral election. He is New York City’s first Muslim mayor, and is the first South Asian to hold the office. Mamdani’s policies are focused around providing more affordable services such as housing, childcare, and raising the minimum wage.
Photo Credit: Victor Llorente for The New Yorker

 

November 26 – A fire engulfing multiple apartment buildings in Hong Kong resulted in the deaths of at least 156 people. 30 people were listed as missing for a week after the event. The wife of Wong, the man in the image, was among those still missing. The fire was Hong Kong’s deadliest since 1948.
Photo Credit: Tyrone Siu / Reuters

 

December 13 – A manhunt for the perpetrator of a Brown University shooting was underway last December. The shooting resulted in two students dead and nine injured. Classes were canceled for the following week, and a nine-hour lockdown left students and staff trapped on campus. In 2025, America saw 406 mass shootings, 77 of which were targeted at schools (including universities).
Photo Credit: Christopher Capozziello / The New York Times / Redux

 

December 14 – Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, suffered a blow to its Jewish community after a mass shooting targeted those who gathered on its shores to celebrate Hanukkah. Australia’s deadliest mass shooting in 30 years, it left 15 killed and at least 27 others hospitalized.
Photo Credit: Matthew Abbott / The New York Times / Redux
Donate to The Auroran Today

Your donation will support the student journalists of Muscatine High School . Your contribution will allow us to purchase equipment and cover our annual website hosting costs.

More to Discover
Donate to The Auroran Today