"On January 20th, the flags at the Capitol will fly at full-staff to celebrate our country coming together behind the inauguration of our 47th President, Donald Trump," Johnson said in a statement. "The flags will be lowered back to half-staff the following day to continue honoring President Jimmy Carter.”
Sound familiar? No, I'm not talking about President Biden and his administration's support of Israel. It's January 1981, President Jimmy Carter is on his way out and the foreign government his administration is supporting is El Salvador's. Since Carter's ...
I suppose I first became aware of Jimmy Carter when I lived in South Carolina in the 1970s. He was the down-home peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia who had become governor. Long before that happened,
At least 30 governors ordered flags to be flown at full-staff on Inauguration Day, raising flags before the end of the mourning period for Jimmy Carter.
North Carolina joins at least 20 other states that will raise flags from half-staff on Jan. 20, President-elect Donald Trump's Inauguration Day.
Several Republican Governors have pledged to fly their flags at full-staff, despite President Biden’s former directive.
The flags at the South Carolina statehouse will fly at full-staff from sunrise to sunset Monday in honor of the inauguration of President Donald Trump.
U.S. flags at President-elect Donald Trump's private Mar-a-Lago club are back to flying at full height. Flags are supposed to fly at half-staff through the end of January out of
A generous description of former President Jimmy Carter's foreign policy ... There, alongside former South African President Nelson Mandela, Carter cradled babies infected with the virus, lovingly ...
Jimmy Carter, who died Dec. 29 at the age of 100, spent his life intertwined with America’s and the world’s enduring legacy of slavery
This story originally appeared on Georgia Recorder. Jimmy Carter would chart a new course for the state at the start of his four-year term serving as Georgia’s governor when he used his inauguration address in 1971 to assert a public stand against the racial segregation that still maintained its popularity among many white Georgians.
Former York County Prison contractor Joseph Garcia got a reprieve from a potentially costly federal court decision in an abuse case against him as a result of the death of former President Jimmy Carter.