Jimmy Carter eulogized by Kamala Harris and others as 39th president 
		returns to Washington
		
		 
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		 [January 08, 2025]  
		By BILL BARROW, JONATHAN J. COOPER and FARNOUSH AMIRI 
		
		WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly 44 years after Jimmy Carter left the nation's 
		capital in humbling defeat, the 39th president returned to Washington on 
		Tuesday for state funeral rites that featured the kind of bipartisan 
		praise and ceremonial pomp the Georgia Democrat rarely enjoyed at his 
		political peak. 
		 
		The military honor guards, a procession down Pennsylvania Avenue and a 
		service in the Capitol Rotunda continued public commemorations for 
		Carter, who died Dec. 29 at age 100. Services will continue through his 
		state funeral Thursday at the National Cathedral, before Carter returns 
		to his hometown of Plains, Georgia, for burial beside his late wife, 
		former first lady Rosalynn Carter, who died in 2023. 
		 
		As the sun set outside the Capitol, Vice President Kamala Harris, House 
		Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune — none of 
		whom were old enough to vote in Carter's first national campaign — 
		celebrated his faith, military service and devotion to service more than 
		anything he did in politics. 
		 
		“To be sure, his presidency was not without its challenges and 
		international crises,” said Harris, for whom Carter cast his final 
		presidential ballot this fall. But she described him nonetheless as 
		“that all-too-rare example of a gifted man who also walks with humility, 
		modesty and grace.” 
		
		
		  
		
		As a presidential candidate in 1976, Harris noted, he slept in the homes 
		of his supporters to “share a meal with them at their table and listen 
		to what was on their minds.” 
		 
		Thune, the newly elected majority leader, ticked through Carter's legacy 
		beyond the White House, including his hands-on contributions to 
		rebuilding homes through Habitat For Humanity. “First and foremost a 
		faithful servant of his creator, and his fellow man,” said Thune, a 
		South Dakota Republican. 
		 
		Johnson, a Louisiana Republican who was just four years old when Carter 
		was inaugurated, recalled his fellow Southerner as a man “willing to 
		roll up his own sleeves to get the work done.” 
		 
		The former president was to lie in state Tuesday night and again 
		Wednesday before his remains are moved to National Cathedral. There, 
		President Joe Biden will eulogize Carter, his longtime ally. 
		 
		Carter’s remains, which had been lying in repose at the Carter 
		Presidential Center since Saturday, left the Atlanta campus Tuesday 
		morning, accompanied by his children and extended family. Special Air 
		Mission 39 departed Dobbins Air Reserve Base north of Atlanta and 
		arrived at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland before Carter was brought to 
		Washington. 
		 
		Carter never traveled as president on the iconic blue and white Boeing 
		747 variant that is known as Air Force One when the sitting president is 
		on board. It first flew as Air Force One in 1990 with President George 
		H.W. Bush. 
		 
		Many of the rituals this week are typical of what follows a president’s 
		death — the Air Force rides to and from the Beltway, the horse-drawn 
		caisson in the capital, the Lincoln catafalque in the rotunda. 
		 
		There also is symbolism unique to Carter. As he was carried from his 
		presidential center, a military band played the hymns “Amazing Grace” 
		and “Blessed Assurance” for the outspoken Baptist evangelical, who 
		called himself a born-again Christian. 
		 
		Another hymn, “Just as I am, without one plea,” played as Carter was 
		transferred from the hearse at the U.S. Navy Memorial to the horse-drawn 
		caisson for the rest of his trip to the Capitol. The location was a nod 
		to Carter’s place as the lone U.S. Naval Academy graduate to become 
		commander in chief. 
		 
		The path also was meant as a mirror to Carter famously getting out of 
		his secure limousine during the 1977 inaugural parade and walking up 
		Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House with his family. 
		 
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            The flag-draped casket of former President Jimmy Carter lies in 
			state during a ceremony in the Capitol, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, in 
			Washington. Carter died Dec. 29 at the age of 100. (Saul Loeb/Pool 
			via AP) 
            
			
			
			  
            A bipartisan delegation of members of Congress were led into the 
			Capitol Rotunda by Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, both 
			Democrats who represent Carter’s home state. Harris, members of 
			President Joe Biden's cabinet and U.S. Supreme Court justices John 
			Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh and Elena Kagan were present. 
			 
			The U.S. Army Band Brass Quintet played as people awaited the 
			casket. The room fell silent as three knocks on the rotunda door 
			marked Carter's arrival. The casket was placed in the middle of the 
			room on the catafalque built in 1865 to hold assassinated President 
			Abraham Lincoln's casket in the same place. 
			 
			The U.S. Naval Academy Glee Club performed “My Country, 'Tis of 
			Thee” before congressional leaders and Harris, accompanied by her 
			husband Doug Emhoff, placed wreaths beside the casket. Members of 
			Carter's family, including some of his grandchildren and 
			great-grandchildren, wiped tears. 
			 
			The pomp carried some irony for a politician who went from his 
			family peanut warehouse to the Governor’s Mansion and eventually the 
			White House. Carter won the presidency as the smiling Southerner and 
			technocratic engineer who promised to change the ways of Washington 
			— and eschewed many of its unwritten rules when he got there. 
			 
			From 1977 to 1981, Carter was Washington's highest-ranking resident. 
			But he never mastered it. 
			 
			“He could be prickly and a not very appealing personality” in a town 
			that thrives on relationships, said biographer Jonathan Alter, 
			describing a president who struggled with schmoozing lawmakers and 
			reporters. 
			 
			Carter often flouted the kind of ceremonial trappings that have been 
			on display following his death. 
			 
			While in office he wanted to keep the Marine Band from playing “Hail 
			to the Chief,” thinking it elevated the president too much, but his 
			advisers persuaded him to accept it as part of the job. It has 
			played multiple times since Carter's presidential funeral ceremonies 
			began. 
            
			  
			He also never used his full name, James Earl Carter Jr., even when 
			taking the oath of office. His full name was printed on memorial 
			cards given to mourners in Atlanta and was used again in the 
			rotunda. 
			 
			Carter once addressed the nation from the White House residence 
			wearing a cardigan, now on display at his museum and library. His 
			remains now rest in a wooden casket that was carried and guarded by 
			military pallbearers in impeccable dress uniforms, similar to the 
			attire worn by the Naval Academy midshipmen who saluted him on 
			Pennsylvania Avenue. 
			 
			Still, Carter was not met entirely with adulation Tuesday. 
			President-elect Donald Trump, who mocked Carter during the 2024 
			campaign, criticized him again during a news conference in Florida 
			for ceding control of the Panama Canal. 
			 
			Pressed on whether criticism of Carter was appropriate during the 
			solemn national rites, Trump responded, “I liked him as a man. I 
			disagreed with his policies. He thought giving away the Panama Canal 
			was a good thing.” 
			 
			“I didn’t want to bring up the Panama Canal because of Jimmy 
			Carter’s death,” Trump added, though he had first mentioned it 
			unprompted. 
			 
			Trump plans to attend Carter's Washington funeral. 
			
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