Jimmy Carter death - latest news: Former president’s funeral set for Jan. 9 as Biden declares national day of mourning
President-elect Donald Trump and President Joe Biden lead tributes to Carter after he died at his home in Plains, Georgia, aged 100
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Your support makes all the difference.Jimmy Carter’s funeral will be held on January 9 at the Washington National Cathedral, where President Joe Biden will give a eulogy, funeral organizers told The New York Times.
Carter, a Nobel Peace Prize winner and peanut farm operator who became the 39th president of the United States, died at his home in Plains, Georgia, on Sunday at 100 years old, the Carter Foundation confirmed.
The funeral is one of eight days of ceremonies and honors, which will include Carter’s body being flown to Washington, D.C. where he will lie in state at the Capitol Rotunda.
Biden has also marked January 9 as a national day of mourning and has called on U.S. citizens to assemble “in their respective places of worship” to pay homage to the former president.
Heartfelt tributes continue pouring in from world leaders celebrating Carter’s life and humanitarian achievements, including President-elect Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Pope Francis.
Explained: What happens when a president dies?
There are a number of traditions and customs that govern the death of a US president, but the wishes of the family are also heavily considered, meaning the proceedings can be quite different from each other.
Gustaf Kilander explains.
What happens when a president dies?
Following Jimmy Carter’s death at the age of 100, his funeral will be first for a Democratic president in more than half a century
‘We give money, we don’t take it’: Where might former president Jimmy Carter’s savings go after he dies?
Jimmy Carter, former president of the United States, was not an extravagant man.
He lived on a property in Plains, Georgia — where he died Sunday at age 100 — that was worth a fraction of the average U.S. house price, he shopped at budget stores, and he did not fly privately.
The least expensive former president for the U.S. government, Carter and his wife Rosalynn — who died in 2023 — lived a surprisingly average life after his term ended in 1981.
While the Carters lived a public life, they were nothing if not generous with their money.
“We give money, we don’t take it,” the former president told The Los Angeles Times in 1989 — though his record of charitable donations speaks for itself.
Katie Hawkinson has the report:
Where might former president Jimmy Carter’s money go after he dies?
The former president reportedly lived in a $167,000 house and flew commercial
Watch: Carter recalls advice he was given during Iranian hostage crisis
Continuing a life of public service, Jimmy Carter spent his final years building houses for the poor
He was the oldest living president and had been out of the White House for more than 35 years, but Jimmy Carter never stopped working to improve the lives of others — much of which included building homes for the needy.
Even well into his 90s, Carter put on a hard hat and volunteered with Habitat for Humanity, the nonprofit organization he often partnered with through The Carter Center.
The one-term president — who died Sunday at his home in Plains, Georgia — worked alongside 103,000 volunteers in 14 countries to build, renovate and repair 4,331 homes with Habitat for Humanity for more than 35 years. Often, Carter and his late wife, former first lady Rosalynn Carter, volunteered together.
Graeme Massie and Ariana Baio have the story.
How Jimmy Carter built houses for the poor until his final years
Former president helped build, renovate and repair more than 4,331 homes with Habitat for Humanity
Watch: Biden says America lost ‘remarkable leader’ as he pays tribute to ‘dear friend’
Trump says he ‘strongly disagrees’ with Carter ‘philosophically and politically’ in second statment
Carter never got to appoint a Supreme Court justice. Trump appointed three
Jimmy Carter served a full presidential term without the chance to appoint a Supreme Court justice.
Carter, who died on Sunday aged 100, sat in the White House from 1977 to 1981. While serving the single term before being succeeded by Ronald Reagan, Carter did not appoint a single justice to the higher court, as no vacancies occurred.
He marks the only one-term president to finish a full term without making an appointment and the fourth overall.
Donald Trump, however, appointed three in his first term: Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch. They make up half of the six justices appointed by GOP presidents, with nine making up the current Supreme Court.
Meeting Jimmy Carter — and getting a scoop about Bush, Blair and Iraq from the perfect gentleman
The thing that sticks in my mind — even now — was the welcoming eyes and the warm smile.
He stretched out his hand to offer it in greeting and said something along the measure of: “Thanks for coming down to see us.”
Jimmy Carter — who died Sunday at his home in Plains, Georgia, at age 100 — was always known as a gentleman, a farmer from Georgia who had held the most powerful political office in the world. But it did not seem forced, it did not seem an act.
I’d flown to the offices of The Carter Center in Atlanta to interview him about his latest book, The Hornet’s Nest: A Novel of the Revolutionary War. He’d written plenty of books — he would go on to author more than 30 — but this was his first novel, one that the publisher Simon & Schuster described as “a sweeping novel of the American South and the War of Independence.”
Find out more about when Andrew Buncombe met the 39th president.
Meeting Jimmy Carter — and getting a scoop about Bush, Blair and Iraq
When Andrew Buncombe met the 39th president it was rare for ex-occupants of Oval Office to criticize their successors
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