Elected US President Joe Biden will be sworn in
Elected US President Joe Biden will be sworn in
President-elect Joe Biden, who is being sworn on January 20, President Trump has refused to attend
the ceremony and other dignitaries are attending.
Biden is being sworn in as
the 46th president of the United States on January 20. President Trump
announced on January 8 that he would not attend the ceremony. The swearing-in ceremony takes place in Washington, D.C., where the president-elect
takes the oath of office with the words, "I swear that I will faithfully
carry out my duties as President of the United States."
With the words that Biden will become
the 46th President of the United States, the most important part of the
swearing-in ceremony will be completed. After Biden is sworn in,
Kamala Harris will become vice president, but she will take her oath before Biden.
According to past traditions, former US
presidents will also attend the ceremony, and senators and members of the House
of Representatives will be allowed to bring a guest with them.
The historic ceremony will begin on
January 20 at 11:30 a.m. US time. Biden will move to the White House
after being sworn in.
Leading singer Lady Gaga will
entertain the audience with her unique style. Jennifer Lopez will
enhance the event with her performances. Singer and actress Demi Lovato
will also perform. Justin Timberlake and rock star Bon Jovi are also preparing
to show the essence of their art.
Strict security arrangements
have been put in place for the event amid fears of violent protests.
Has something like this happened in the
past?
This is not the first time that a coup
has been threatened during a presidential ceremony. There have been two
previous incidents in the United States when one side refused to accept the
election results and a coup-like situation arose in the country.
Violent demonstrations took place in The United States in 1860 and 1861, prior to Abraham Lincoln's presidency
and Rudford B. Hayes' presidency in 1876 and 1877, and there was a state of
uncertainty.
Strict security measures
Extremely tight security arrangements
for the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden on January 20 in
Washington, DC, could not be better described as a member of Congress from
Massachusetts. What's on your Twitter?
"There aren't as many troops in
Washington DC as there are in Afghanistan right now, and they're here to
protect us from the president," said Seth Multon of the Democratic Party. Digest it first.
Molton is not saying anything wrong.
There are currently 25,000 National Guards in Washington, D.C., who are tasked
with protecting various locations within the city, as well as backing up and
training the police, intelligence, and other agencies. That they can deal with
civil unrest.
Even if the National Guards are forgotten
for a moment, the city looks like a ghost town, a ghost town guarded by the
world's most powerful superpower. Banks, restaurants, and shops are not only
closed but boards have been put up in front of them so that no one can break
into them. The road leading to the White House has a fence that cannot be
climbed or climbed easily.
Another president refused to attend the
swearing-in ceremony
In 1869, another Democratic president, Andrew
Johnson, who had been indicted, refused to attend the swearing-in ceremony
of newly elected President Ulysses S. Grant. President Trump is thought to like
Johnson, who has similarly refused to acknowledge Biden's inauguration.
In 1801, John Adams refused to attend
President Thomas Jefferson's invasion and he quietly left Washington
for Baltimore that morning.
His son, John Quincy Adams,
followed in his father's footsteps and did not attend President Andrew Jackson's
ceremony in 1829. He hated them very much.
The transition this year has been bitter
due to President Trump's refusal to accept the results, but as in the
past, power is still being transferred from one hand to the other.
"The system is working," Sean
Wilentz, a professor of history at Princeton University, told the BBC. The road
is very rough, there are a lot of tremors but there is still going to be a
transfer of power.
Colin Powell Support Joe Biden
President Trump's impeachment has been approved
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