Bidens open final White House holiday season with turkey pardons,
Christmas tree and 'friendsgiving'
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[November 26, 2024]
By BILL BARROW, DARLENE SUPERVILLE and AAMER MADHANI
NEW YORK (AP) — President Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, on Monday opened
their final holiday season at the White House with the annual turkey
pardons and Christmas tree arrival before they hosted “friendsgiving” in
New York City for U.S. Coast Guard members and their families.
“Simply put, we owe you. We owe your families,” Biden said at U.S. Coast
Guard Sector New York on Staten Island. “Thank you, thank you, thank
you.”
The meal was part of the first lady's Joining Forces initiative to
support military families. “With all my heart, thank you for your
service and your sacrifice," she said before the president spoke.
Both then tied dark aprons with the presidential seal around their dress
clothes and joined the chow line, where they served a side dish of
roasted Brussels sprouts. Celebrity chef Robert Irvine helped with the
menu of turkey, ham, side dishes and desserts.
Earlier at the White House, Biden issued the traditional reprieve to
turkeys Peach and Blossom who will bypass the Thanksgiving table to live
out their days in southern Minnesota.
He welcomed 2,500 guests to the South Lawn under sunny skies as he joked
about the birds' fates and sounded wistful about the approaching end of
his half-century in Washington power circles.
“It’s been the honor of my life. I’m forever grateful,” Biden said of
his single term as president. The reins of power will transfer on Jan.
20 to Republican President-elect Donald Trump, the man Biden defeated
four years ago and was battling again until he was pressured to bow out
of the race amid concerns about his age and viability. Biden is 82.
Biden relished the brief ceremony with the pardoned turkeys named for
the official flower of his home state of Delaware.
“The peach pie in my state is one of my favorites,” he said during
remarks that were occasionally interrupted by Peach gobbling atop a
table to Biden's right. “Peach is making a last-minute plea,” Biden said
at one point.
Biden introduced Peach as a bird who “lives by the motto, ‘Keep calm and
gobble on.’” Blossom, the president said, has a different motto: “No
fowl play. Just Minnesota nice.”
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President Joe Biden, from second left, and chef Robert Irvine serve
food at a Friendsgiving event with service members and their
families in the Staten Island borough of New York, Monday, Nov. 25
2024. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Peach and Blossom came from the farm of John Zimmerman, near the
southern Minnesota city of Northfield. Zimmerman, who has raised
about 4 million turkeys, is president of the National Turkey
Federation, which has gifted Thanksgiving turkeys to U.S. presidents
since the Truman administration after World War II. President Harry
Truman, however, preferred to eat the birds. Official pardon
ceremonies did not become an annual White House tradition until the
administration of President George H.W. Bush in 1989.
With their presidential reprieve, Peach and Blossom will live out
their days at Farmamerica, an agriculture interpretative center near
Waseca in southern Minnesota. The center's aim is to promote
agriculture and educate future farmers and others about agriculture
in America.
The first lady also received the official White House Christmas tree
that will be decorated and put on display in the Blue Room. The 18.5
foot (5.64 meter) Fraser fir came from a farm in an area of western
North Carolina that recently was devastated by Hurricane Helene.
Cartner’s Christmas Tree Farm lost thousands of trees in the storm
“but this one remained standing and they named it ‘Tremendous’ for
the extraordinary hope that it represents,” Jill Biden said.
Biden began his long goodbye Friday night with a gala in a pavilion
erected on the South Lawn for hundreds of friends, supporters,
Cabinet secretaries, Democratic donors and long-serving staff
members who came to hear from the president and pay tribute, —
despite Biden effectively being forced off the Democratic ticket
this summer and then watching Vice President Kamala Harris suffer
defeat on Nov. 5.
“I’m so proud that we’ve done all of this with a deep belief in the
core values of America,” said Biden, sporting a tuxedo for the
black-tie event. Setting aside his criticisms of Trump as a
fundamental threat to democracy, Biden added his characteristic
national cheerleading: “I fully believe that America is better
positioned to lead the world today than at any point in my 50 years
of public service.”
___ Barrow and Superville reported from Washington. Associated Press
writer Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis contributed to this report.
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