Jason Carter, the late Jimmy Carter's grandson, wowed funeralgoers with his powerful speech at the 39th United States President's funeral, with people online urging him to 'run for something'
Bill Clinton. George W. Bush. Barack Obama. Donald Trump. Joe Biden.
Jason Carter, the grandson of the late President Jimmy Carter, delivered a powerful eulogy at his grandfather's funeral, leading many to urge him to 'run for something'
former President Bill Clinton. Carter’s grandson, former Democratic Georgia State Senator Jason Carter, got the attendees laughing as he told stories of his grandfather. “His political life ...
The state funeral of former President Jimmy Carter was held at Washington National Cathedral Thursday on what President Biden proclaimed a national day of mourning.
Obama sat next to Trump and the two longtime political rivals chatted amiably as the dignitaries filed in for the service.
Bill Clinton. George W ... “The power of regular people,” Carter’s grandson, Jason Carter, said in his eulogy. In a country where political money is unfathomable in its amounts and its ...
“The power of regular people,” Carter’s grandson, Jason Carter, said in his eulogy ... Obama, Bush and Clinton, it will always have the last word for the five who gathered Thursday ...
His grandson Jason Carter now chairs the board.What's next ... Some other modern presidents — Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton — also grew up in small-town settings, but Carter ...
After a family funeral, the 39th president will be buried beside his wife at their home in Plains, Ga. President Biden, one of the five living presidents who attended Mr. Carter’s state funeral earlier Thursday in Washington,
President Joe Biden, President-elect Donald Trump, former presidents and other dignitaries came together Thursday to honor the life of former President Jimmy Carter at a state funeral at Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.
Carter was celebrated for his personal humility and public service before, during and after his presidency during a funeral at Washington National Cathedral featuring the kind of pageantry he typically eschewed.