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Former President Jimmy Carter honored at state funeral

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Biden says there's an obligation to stand up to the abuse of power while honoring Carter
01:33 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Today’s service: Former President Jimmy Carter was honored at a state funeral today at the Washington National Cathedral, where President Joe Biden delivered a eulogy. Tributes to the former president praised him as an honest man who was a leader ahead of his time.

• Carter’s legacy: The 39th president, who died last month in Georgia, was the oldest living former US president and the first to reach 100. He led enduring foreign policy initiatives, including a peace deal between Israel and Egypt, the normalization of relations with China and the treaties that gave Panama control of the Panama Canal from the US.

Presidents in attendance: President-elect Donald Trump and former Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama were in attendance at the service. It’s an exceedingly rare convening, and marked the first time all of them have come face-to-face since the funeral of George H.W. Bush in December 2018.

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We’ve wrapped up our live coverage of former President Jimmy Carter’s state funeral. Read about today’s events below.

Carter laid to rest in his hometown of Plains, Georgia

Observances honoring the late President Jimmy Carter concluded with an interment on Thursday evening in his hometown of Plains, Georgia, following a private service at Maranatha Baptist Church where the humanitarian and farmer taught Sunday school for decades.

Carter, who was the oldest living former US president, died December 29 at the age of 100. Over the weekend, Carter’s motorcade traveled through Plains, past his boyhood home and the Georgia State Capitol, and arrived at the Carter Presidential Center in Atlanta, where Carter lay in repose. Carter’s casket was then taken to Washington, DC, to lie in state at the US Capitol Rotunda ahead of a state funeral.

After the private funeral service Thursday evening, Carter’s motorcade travelled through his hometown to his residence for interment — the same location his wife, Rosalynn, was buried following her death last year.

Eulogizing Carter at the state funeral at the Washington National Cathedral this morning, President Joe Biden remembered him as “a man who never let the ties of politics divert him from his mission to serve and shape the world.”

Biden, who marked Thursday, January 9, 2025 as a National Day of Mourning, has also directed the US flag to be flown at half-staff for 30 days.

Carter's motorcade arrives at his home church in Georgia

Former President Jimmy Carter’s motorcade has arrived at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Georgia, where a private funeral will be held for the 39th president.

The church’s pastor stood outside the main door to welcome him before the casket was taken inside the church. Navy pilots conducted a flyover outside the church as Carter’s direct family watched.

Earlier Thursday, Carter was honored at a state funeral in Washington that was attended by former Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, along with President-elect Donald Trump. In one of his final acts in office, President Joe Biden delivered a euology.

Adviser says he sought to "redeem" Carter's presidency during eulogy

Former Carter adviser Stuart Eizenstat said the purpose of his eulogy at Jimmy Carter’s funeral was to “redeem” Carter’s presidency from the notion that is was not successful.

“Well, first of all, if I had a purpose in this speech, it was to redeem his presidency from the notion that he was only a great ex-president and implicitly, therefore, an unsuccessful president,” Eizenstat said on CNN after Thursday’s service.

Eizenstat added that Carter “would be really very concerned with the tremendous polarization that we have in the country today.”

“You can’t govern this country if you view the other side, not just as your honored opponent, but as the enemy,” Eizenstat said. “He never did. He had very good relations with the Republican leaderships on both sides.”

He described the late president as an “exemplar of an era which we need to get back to, of more bipartisanship, where we don’t, again, feel that the opponent is our enemy.”

Key lines from Jimmy Carter's funeral service

Former President Jimmy Carter was eulogized as a humanitarian, farmer and nuclear engineer who was deeply devoted to his family and country and remained true to his faith throughout his 100 years of life.

Here are some key lines from Carter’s funeral service in Washington on Thursday:

  • President Joe Biden: “We have an obligation to give hate no safe harbor. And to stand up to what my dad used to say is the greatest sin of all, the abuse of power. … We’re keeping the faith with the best of humankind and the best of America, is a story, in my view, from my perspective, of Jimmy Carter’s life.”
  • Ted Mondale, reading a letter from his father, the late Vice President Walter Mondale: “While we had only four years in the White House, he achieved so much in that time. It stood as a marker for Americans dedicated to justice and decency.”
  • Steven Ford, son of the late President Gerald Ford: “God did a good thing when he made your dad.”
  • Stuart Eizenstat, former Carter adviser: “It’s time to redeem his presidency and also lay to rest the myth that his greatest achievement came only as a former president. The test of American presidents is not the number of years they serve, but the duration of their accomplishments. By this measure, Jimmy Carter was among the most consequential one-term presidents in history.”

Carter makes his final journey to the tiny town that shaped a president

The flag-draped casket of former President Jimmy Carter is placed into the hearse by a joint services body bearer team from Special Air Mission 39 at Lawson Army Airfield, on January 9, 2025 in Fort Moore, Georgia.

The body of President Jimmy Carter is making its final journey to Plains, Georgia, the tiny town that shaped the enduring character that was eulogized during his speech in Washington on Thursday.

Jason Carter, the former president’s grandson, said at his funeral on Thursday that the family wanted the world to know that Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter “were just regular folks.”

“Yes, they spent four years in the governor’s mansion and four years at the White House, but the other 92 years, they spent at home in Plains, Georgia,” Jason Carter said. Their no-frills home demonstrated that while Carter was once the most powerful man in the world, he craved a simple life, Jason Carter said.

Carter’s body is en route to Plains, where he will be interred Thursday night after a service at the Maranatha Baptist Church, where he taught Sunday school for decades.

Carter Center adviser describes what we can learn from Jimmy Carter’s "practical idealism"

Michael Posner, a human rights adviser to the late President Jimmy Carter in his post-presidency years, told CNN that Carter’s “principled government advocacy” has been in “short supply” in current politics, advocating Carter’s brand of “practical idealism” in diplomacy.

Regarding the Biden administration, Posner said, “We could have a whole conversation about how well they did on human rights. I give them generally good grades. They’re good people, senior in the administration, who cared a lot about human rights.”

But Posner expressed concern about President-elect Donald Trump’s approach to alliances and international institutions, which he said vastly differed from Carter’s. “I think, as we’re looking forward to the next four years, those (alliances) are going to be some of the things that are going to be challenged most directly by … the new administration.”

In photos: Remembering former President Jimmy Carter at the Washington National Cathedral

Former President Jimmy Carter was honored at a state funeral Thursday at the Washington National Cathedral.

Carter died December 29 at the age of 100. People were able to pay their respects this week at the US Capitol Rotunda, where Carter had been lying in state.

See photos from the service:

The flag-draped casket of former President Jimmy Carter is carried into the Washington National Cathedral for his state funeral on Thursday, January 9.
While <a href="index.php?page=&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2Fpolitics%2Flive-news%2Fjimmy-carter-funeral-01-09-25%23cm5pj5cwj002a3b5v2h0mhgo2">eulogizing Carter</a> at the funeral, Biden said Carter's enduring attribute was his strong character. “Jimmy Carter’s friendship taught me — and through his life, taught me — strength of character is more than title or the power we hold,” Biden said.
Carter's casket arrives at the cathedral.
From L to R, front row, US President Joe Biden, First Lady Lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamla Harris, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, second row, former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President George W. Bush, his wife Laura Bush, former President Barack Obama, President-elect Donald Trump and his wife Melania Trump attend the State Funeral Service for former US President Jimmy Carter at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.
Jason Carter touches his grandfather's casket after speaking at the funeral. <a href="index.php?page=&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2Fpolitics%2Flive-news%2Fjimmy-carter-funeral-01-09-25%23cm5pip5tb001x3b5vahaafxh6">Carter jokingly described his grandfather as “the first millennial”</a> after listing many of his progressive stances.
Carter's casket arrives at the cathedral.

Analysis: Read this message about political differences delivered from beyond the presidential grave

The first two pews at the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter should be a diagram of acrimony.

Former President Barack Obama sat next to President-elect Donald Trump. They were behind Vice President Kamala Harris. Former President George W. Bush sat in front of former Vice President Al Gore. There was former Vice President Mike Pence and Hillary Clinton, not to mention President Joe Biden.

But this meeting of current and former presidents to mark the passing of one of their own offered an important lesson in how to put politics in its place.

It turns out that Carter and former President Gerald Ford, the man he defeated to gain the White House, became close friends after Carter was defeated by Ronald Reagan in 1980.

They mutually agreed in a phone call to deliver eulogies at their respective funerals. Ford died in December 2006, and Carter did speak at his predecessor’s funeral in January 2007.

“There is an old line to the effect that two presidents in a room is one too many,” Ford said in a tribute, read by his son Steven on Thursday, noting that he was worried about sharing a flight with Carter to the funeral of assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981.

It was at about this moment that Obama could be seen nodding as he shared some words with Trump.

Carter and Ford, like Clinton, W. Bush and Obama, adhered to the philosophy of retreating from day-to-day politics after leaving the White House. Trump, so far the anomaly, never left the political fight and fought his way back to the White House. And he still has animosity, at least in public, for both Obama and Biden.

But Trump is barred by the Constitution from running in a fourth presidential election, which means he will officially join the former presidents club four years from January 20. Perhaps then he and the presidents who came before and after him will find some kind of peace.

"Hail to the Chief," a song Carter famously shunned, performed at his state funeral

While the body of former President Jimmy Carter was carried out of the Washington National Cathedral, the US Coast Guard Band performed “Hail to the Chief,” a song Carter once asked to not be played when he made public entrances.

“They just played ‘Hail to the Chief’ … a song that Jimmy Carter famously did not like and did not allowed to be played when he first took the White House. And then finally aides convinced him, ‘You know the American people like this, they like this part of the presidency and the majesty that comes with it in that sense,’” according to CNN’s Kaitlan Collins.

Carter once told CBS that “one of the most unpleasant things that surprised me was when I quit having ‘Hail to the Chief’ every time I entered a room, but there was an outcry of condemnation.”

Funeral service has ended

The remains of former President Jimmy Carter are carried by an honor guard on departure from the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, DC, after a State Funeral Service on January 9.

Following the funeral service for the late president, the motorcade carrying Jimmy Carter’s body will depart the Washington National Cathedral.

Carter’s motorcade will next go to Joint Base Andrews, and then the former president’s body will travel to Plains, Georgia, for a private internment at the family residence.

Former presidents donned flashes of blue, while first ladies wore somber dresses to funeral

Melania Trump looks on during the State Funeral Service for former President Jimmy Carter at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

Blue was the shade du jour for politicians paying their respects at the state funeral of former President Jimmy Carter.

Each was varying in hue and vibrancy — former President George W. Bush opted for a sky blue tie and navy suit, while President Joe Biden selected a deeper, indigo shade of neckwear. Even President-elect Donald Trump, renowned for his wide scarlet red ties, swapped in a
cerulean option. It was a subtle, visual nod to Carter’s Democratic legacy.

More uniformed were the first ladies, each arriving in traditional all-black. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accessorized her tailored suit with a gold bald eagle brooch with a US flag — the national emblem since 1782. First lady Jill Biden chose to re-wear the Schiaparelli knee-length skirt suit first debuted at Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral in 2022, complete with four golden buttons on the front of her jacket. The flourish of Melania Trump’s outfit was different, with the returning first lady dressed in a long-sleeved black shift dress and an oversized white church collar.

Carter's UN ambassador praises his "tough mind and tender heart"

Rev. Andrew Young, former US ambassador to the United Nations, speaks at the National Funeral Service of former President Jimmy Carter at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

The Rev. Andrew Young, the US ambassador to the United Nations during Jimmy Carter’s presidency, praised the “tough mind and tender heart” of the late president.

“Time and time again, I saw in him the ability to achieve greatness by the diversity of his personality and his upbringing,” he said.

“Dr. (Martin Luther King Jr.) used to say that greatness is characterized by antithesis, strongly marked. You have to have a tough mind and heart,” Young said. “And that was Jimmy Carter.”

He added: “I’ve known President Carter for more than half of my life. And I never cease to be surprised, I never cease to be enlightened, I never cease to be inspired by the little deeds of love and mercy that he shared with us every day of his life. It was President James Earl Carter that for me symbolized the greatness of the United States of America.”

Biden says there's an obligation to stand up to the abuse of power while honoring Carter

President Joe Biden makes the sign of the cross as he walks past the casket of former President Jimmy Carter during his State Funeral Service at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

President Joe Biden said there is an obligation to stand up to the abuse of power in an eulogy honoring former President Jimmy Carter.

He continued, “We’re all fallible. But it’s about asking ourselves, are we striving to do things, the right things? What value – what are the values that animate our spirit? Do we operate from fear or hope? Ego or generosity? Do we show grace? Do we keep the faith when it’s most tested?”

Biden highlighted Carter’s life and referred to the late president as “a man who never let the ties of politics divert him from his mission to serve and shape the world.”

After Biden finished his eulogy and started walking back to his seat, he gently touched Carter’s casket.

Biden says Carter's enduring attribute was "character"

President Joe Biden speaks at the National Funeral Service of former President Jimmy Carter at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

President Joe Biden said Jimmy Carter’s enduring attribute was his strong character while eulogizing the former president on Thursday.

Recalling his early endorsement of Carter’s candidacy for president while he was a young senator, Biden said he based that endorsement based “on what I believe is Jimmy Carter’s enduring attribute: character, character, character.”

“Jimmy Carter’s friendship taught me, and through his life, taught me, strength of character is more than title or the power we hold,” Biden continued.

Carter's Navy experience is honored during funeral service

The US Marine Orchestra & Cathedral Choir and Armed Forces Chorus performed “Eternal Father, Strong to Save” during former President Jimmy Carter’s funeral service.

During the performance, a naval officer’s hat was on display, signifying the late president’s Navy experience.

After studying reactor technology and nuclear physics at Union College in Schenectady, New York, Carter was assigned to the submarine force. The future peacemaker served in the Atlantic and Pacific fleets before he was tapped by Adm. Hyman Rickover, the crotchety “Father of the Nuclear Navy,” to serve as a senior officer of the pre-commissioning crew of the Seawolf, the second US nuclear submarine.

After leaving active Navy duty in 1953, Carter spent time raising his children, running the family peanut farm and taking his first political steps, winning election to the Georgia Senate in 1962.

Carter grandson jokes the former president was the "first millennial" and reflects on his legacy

Jason Carter speaks during the state funeral for former President Jimmy Carter at Washington National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

Jason Carter, Jimmy Carter’s grandson, jokingly described his grandfather as “the first millennial” after listing many of his progressive stances.

“And by the way, he cut the deficit, wanted to decriminalize marijuana, deregulated so many industries that he gave us cheap flights, and as you heard, craft beer. Basically, all of those years ago, he was the first millennial,” he said.

But in the end, Jason Carter said, Jimmy Carter’s “life is a love story.”

“And of course, it’s a love story about Jimmy and Rosalynn and their 77 years of marriage and service,” he said.

“Rest assured that in these last weeks, he told us that he was ready to see her again,” he said.

Jason Carter also spoke about his grandfather’s pivotal involvement in working to eradicate Guinea worm disease.

About 3.5 million people had the parasite in the mid-1980s, when Carter turned his attention to the problem, but case numbers were down to just 13 as of 2022, according to preliminary totals from the Carter Center at that time.

Former aide says it's a "myth" that most of Carter's accomplishments came after his presidency

Former Chief Domestic Policy Adviser Stuart Eizenstat speaks at the National Funeral Service of former President Jimmy Carter at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, on January 9.

Ex-Carter aide Stuart Eizenstat described the former president as “as close to being a Renaissance man as any president entering the Oval Office in modern times.”

“He was skilled in an astonishing array of activities: farmer, businessman, nuclear engineer, naval submarine officer, woodworker, painter, fly flisherman, music lover, poet, author, Sunday school teacher, creator of the Carter Center and yes, loving husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather and Nobel Peace Prize winner.”

“President Carter parked politics at the Oval Office door to do what he believed was the right thing: taking controversial challenges on, regardless of the political consequences. And frankly, there were many,” he said.

“Much of his agenda passed with bipartisan support, a quaint notion in today’s hyper-polarized politics,” he said.

Eizenstat noted some of Carter’s accomplishments, touting his record on civil rights, education, energy and emergency services.

Carter's casket was carried into the cathedral in a moving and somber moment

The casket bearing the remains of former President Jimmy Carter arrives inside Washington National Cathedral for his state funeral on January 9, in Washington, DC.

In a room filled with the most powerful people in the world, including all living US presidents, everyone stood silently and watched as President Jimmy Carter’s casket was carried into the Washington National Cathedral during a very moving and somber moment.

Carter’s casket was carried to the front of the cathedral as Rev. Andrew Young, former US ambassador to the UN, read from scripture.

Walter Mondale's son reads letter written by late Carter VP

Ted Mondale reads a tribute to former President Jimmy Carter written by his father, former Vice President Walter Mondale, on Thursday.

Ted Mondale, the son of the late Vice President Walter Mondale, read a letter written by his father at Jimmy Carter’s funeral. Mondale, who died in 2021, was Carter’s vice president.

“I was surprised when then-candidate Carter asked me to join him as his running mate in 1976,” Walter Mondale wrote in the 2015 letter read at Carter’s funeral on Thursday. “He amazed me then as he has every year since.”

Mondale wrote that he and Carter became very close friends while “working on real problems, not wasting time.”

“Carter was farsighted; he put aside his short-term political interests to tackle challenges that demanded sacrifice, to protect our kids and grandkids from future harm,” he said.

Mondale also noted that Carter was ahead of his time on many issues, including climate change and women’s equality.