I heard today’s ceremony was just that - a token ceremony. The real swearing-in took place yesterday in private. My questions on this are:
A) Has this actually always been the case for every Presidential Inauguration Day?
B) Is it because yesterday was actually Jan 20th? (And, why do we care about Jan 20th, anyway?)
C) Is it because that Supreme Court genius flubbed it last time, so he wanted privacy in case it happened again this time?
D) Is it a new tradition?
E) Other?
It’s B- the 20th Amendment says the President’s term ends at noon on January 20th, so the swearing-in must be before that, and I guess they don’t like to do the big ceremony on a Sunday. Before the 20th amendment, most inaugurations were in March, I think.
The swearing-in on Sunday was “in private” in the sense that it wasn’t in front of an audience of hundreds of thousands, but it was still televised, so it wouldn’t have been private enough to hide any mistakes. Ronald Reagan had a “private inauguration” that was even less private, being held in front of a sizable audience.
Well, after one of his recent inaugurations, I assume the more public one, as he was walking away he stopped and turned to take in the scene and said “I’m never going to see this again.” So, apparently it hasn’t dawned on him to go for a third term.
Even when the Inauguration was in March whenever March 4th fell on a Sunday they held a private swearing-in on that day, and saved the big public ceremonies for Monday.
A) Has this actually always been the case for every Presidential Inauguration Day?
No. It’s only been done a couple times. It’s only necessary when Inauguration day falls on a Sunday, and only because some presidents thought that would be impious.
B) Is it because yesterday was actually Jan 20th? (And, why do we care about Jan 20th, anyway?)
The Constitution sets January 20 as the day the president gets sworn in. Since Inauguration Day fell on Sunday, it was decided, according to tradition, to move it to Monday.
C) Is it because that Supreme Court genius flubbed it last time, so he wanted privacy in case it happened again this time?
Not a factor. And flubbing really had no serious legal effect – I’m sure it happened from time to time – just before it was going out live on TV. The intention of the oath is what’s important, not the exact words. Obama did it over four years ago to appease though who were insistent that the mistake made a difference, even though they had nothing to base that upon.
D) Is it a new tradition?
It’s a longstanding tradition to not hold the Inauguration on a Sunday. There will only be one inauguration for presidents until the 20th falls on a Sunday again.