Trump sworn in amid protests in US, UK
Agency reports
Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th
President of the United States on Friday, ten weeks after he defeated
Hillary Clinton of the Democratic Party at the November 8 polls.
The property tycoon won an unexpected victory against Clinton in one of the most controversial campaigns in US history.
Chief Justice John Roberts of the
Supreme Court administered the oath to Trump on the steps of the US
Capitol Building, shortly after Mike Pence, the Vice President, was
sworn in by the Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, the
first African American to ever administer the oath of office to a Vice
President or President.
The event was presided over by Roy
Blunt, a Republican senator from Missouri and chairman of the Joint
Congressional Committee on Inaugural Activities. For his swearing in,
Trump used two Bibles — the one used by President Abraham Lincoln in
1861 and the one his mother gave him in 1955.
For his swearing in, Vice President Pence used the one used by Ronald Reagan in 1981.
Until 1933, new US presidents were
inaugurated on March 4, four months after election day, but this was
shortened to around two months with the ratification of the 20th
Amendment.
Apart from Trump’s family — including
his wife Melania — the inauguration ceremony was attended by former
presidents and first ladies, including Jimmy Carter; George and Laura
Bush; Bill and Hillary Clinton; and Barack and Michelle Obama.
Members of the US Congress were also in attendance, although more than 60 House Democrats boycotted the event.
The only absentees were 92-year-old
George Bush Senior, who was in hospital being treated for respiratory
problems, and his wife Barbara.
The Democratic members of Congress had
announced they would skip Trump’s inauguration, citing the President’s
perceived insult of Congressman John Lewis as the final straw.
Trump lashed out at the civil rights
icon last Saturday morning after Lewis said in a Friday interview he
didn’t view Trump as “a legitimate president.”
Lewis, a Georgia Democrat from an
Atlanta-area district who protested alongside the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr., also said he would not attend the inauguration.
Trump had responded that Lewis should
spend more time on fixing and helping his district — “which is in
horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested) rather
than falsely complaining about the election results. All talk, talk,
talk — no action or results. Sad!”
His comments had drawn outrage and messages of support for Lewis from both Democrats and Republicans.
Meanwhile, about 900,000 anti-Trump
protesters are expected to rally in Washington, DC, on Saturday (today)
for the Women’s March on Washington.
Protesters and Washington police had
scuffled on Thursday night outside a meeting of pro-Trump conservatives,
the first of several demonstrations aimed at disrupting the new
administration’s inaugural weekend.
The protesters gathered on 14th Street
outside the National Press Club to demonstrate against “DeploraBall,” an
event organised by some of Trump’s most fervent supporters.
The name riffs off the campaign
description of some Trump backers by his defeated opponent, Hillary
Clinton, as a “basket of deplorables.”
As attendees — some of whom were clad in
suits and red hats, others dressed in gowns — entered the event,
demonstrators chanted “Shame” and “Nazis go home” behind a phalanx of
police. Some held signs that read “No Alt Reich” and “No Nazi USA.”
Other protesters chanted against the
“alt-right,” “fascists” and “Nazi scum,” though it could not be
immediately determined who was attending the event.
Today’s anti-Trump march is staged by
women (and men) who were dismayed that America chose Trump — an alleged
sexual predator whose policies could be a huge setback for women’s
health and rights — over Clinton.
In solidarity with the disgruntled
Americans, thousands of demonstrators in the United Kingdom also
mobilised against Trump’s inauguration, with a banner reading, “Build
bridges not walls,” draped across London’s Tower Bridge.
Meanwhile, Trump delivered a searing
inaugural address, attacking Washington and promising a new hope for
Americans who want to dream big.
Promising “America first,” excerpts from
the US President’s speech said, “America will start winning again,
winning like never before. We will bring back our jobs. We will bring
back our borders. We will bring back our wealth, and we will bring back
our dreams.
“We will build new roads and highways
and bridges and airports and tunnels and railways all across our
wonderful nation. We will get our people off of welfare and back to
work, rebuilding our country with American hands and American labour.”
However, as Trump resumes office,
confirmation hearings for most of his cabinet picks were being delayed
as the nominees had not reached agreements to resolve ethical conflicts
stemming from their financial holdings.
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