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Home Politics

Biden to Spend a Last Day as President in Charleston

by Yonkers Observer Report
January 19, 2025
in Politics
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President Biden will spend his final full day as president in Charleston, S.C., where five years ago he revived his flailing campaign and secured South Carolina’s crucial primary that was widely credited with putting him on the path to the White House.

Mr. Biden will start his day worshiping at the Royal Missionary Baptist Church, a historically Black congregation that he visited on the campaign trail in 2020 before clenching the endorsement of James E. Clyburn, the powerful South Carolina Democratic representative.

During Mr. Biden’s visit, he will observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day, according to a White House official, which will be observed nationally on Monday when Mr. Biden hands the reins of the country over to President-elect Donald J. Trump, who has often shown contempt for contemporary civil rights efforts. Following the service, Mr. Biden will deliver remarks at the International African American Museum.

Mr. Biden’s remarks will focus on Dr. King’s legacy and continued efforts to make his dream of a just society a reality, the White House official said.

It is Mr. Biden’s last official trip as president of the United States, an ode to a state — and its Black electorate — that he has repeatedly credited for enabling him to cap off a half-century career in politics with four years in the White House.

“The truth is I wouldn’t be here without the people of South Carolina,” Mr. Biden said during a January 2024 visit to the state, speaking to Black voters. “You are the reason that I’m president.”

In an interview with The Post & Courier, the South Carolina publication, the Rev. Isaac Holt, pastor of the Royal Missionary Baptist Church, said that Mr. Biden requested to start a final day in office in the pews of the church. The sermon’s message will focus on Mr. King’s legacy, the pastor said, and his sermon will center on the word “struggle.”

“He’s coming back to where he started,” Mr. Holt told the paper.

It was in Charleston that Mr. Biden, seeking the coveted endorsement of Mr. Clyburn, declared during the Democratic primary debate that he would appoint the first Black, female to the Supreme Court — a standout moment in a crowded field of candidates that garnered a groundswell of support from Black Americans that carried him through the primaries. The White House official called the South Carolina primary a pivotal moment in his campaign to secure the Democratic nomination.

In 2015, when he was vice president, Mr. Biden attended the funeral service of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who was murdered along with eight other people in the massacre carried out by a white supremacist at Mother Emanuel A.M.E. Church. Less than a month after the death of one of his sons, Mr. Biden surprised the congregation when he chose to attend and speak at the ceremony at the church, which he said helped him draw strength to endure through his own grief.

Mr. Biden and his family held hands of congregants and sang “We Shall Overcome.”

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