Every new president brings some personal items into the Oval Office in the White House, and the American media has written a lot about what Joe Biden will decorate his new workplace with.
The room is full of portraits and busts of some of the most important people in American history.

"It was important for President Biden to enter the Oval Office that represents America and should show symbolically how he will carry out his duties over the next four years," White House spokeswoman Ashley Williams told The Washington Post.
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The portrait of Andrew Jackson, the seventh president of America and a populist with whom Trump was often identified, was removed from the cabinet, and was also subject to censorship, although he never faced the impeachment procedure.
That portrait was replaced by a picture of Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding fathers who was a prominent writer, scientist and philosopher.
The Washington Post reported that Franklin's portrait should symbolize Biden's interest in science as he tries to fight the pandemic.
On the side of the fireplace, there are busts of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy - great fighters for human rights and figures whom Biden looks up to.
There is also a bust of Rosa Parks, a prominent fighter for human rights, as well as a sculpture of an Apache, a member of the indigenous people, on a horse by the author Alan Hauser.
This sculpture belonged to Daniel Inui, the late Democratic senator from Hawaii.

Above the fireplace is a portrait of Franklin Roosevelt, the president who led America through the Great Depression and World War II.
The wall of Biden's office will also be decorated with portraits of another former president, Thomas Jefferson, as well as the man with whom he often clashed politically, Alexander Hamilton.
"It is an indicator of how the confrontation of opinions within the Republic is of essential importance for democracy," the Washington Post reports the statements from Biden's cabinet.
Portraits of two more American greats - George Washington and Abraham Lincoln - stand next to each other.

Numerous users of social networks noticed that on the table behind Biden there is a bust of Cesar Chavez, the Mexican-American labor leader who fought for the rights of farmers during the sixties and seventies of the 20th century.
Chavez's bust is next to photos of the Biden family.

There are no more golden curtains and carpets brought by Trump in 2017.
Instead, there is a dark blue carpet and curtains with a different shade of gold like those used by Bill Clinton.
The flags of individual branches of the army were replaced by the American one and the one that traditionally belongs to the president of the country.
The controversial bust of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was also taken out of the cabinet.
President Trump promised to return the bust to the Oval Office after it was previously removed by Barack Obama.
Boris Johnson, the British foreign secretary at the time and current prime minister, accused Obama of having "an inherited contempt for the British Empire."
Now, however, his spokesperson has stated:
"The Oval Office is the president's personal office and it's up to him to decorate it as he wants."
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