Inauguration Entire Program
Inauguration Entire Program
Inauguration Ceremonies
Program
The Capitol of the United States of America
January twentieth
Two thousand seventeen
Inauguration
of the
President and Vice President
of the
United States of America
The Capitol of the United States of America
City of Washington
January twentieth
Two thousand seventeen
program
Prelude
Roy Blunt
United States Senator, Missouri
Invocation
TBD
Mitch McConnell
Charles E. Schumer
Paul D. Ryan
Kevin McCarthy
Nancy Pelosi
]
FT
A
R
D
Musical Selection
TBD
Musical Selection
TBD
Inaugural Address
Musical Selection
TBD
Poet
TBD
Benediction
TBD
TBD
th
program
Prelude
Call to Order
Readings &
Invocation
Musical Selection
Readings &
Benediction
Jackie Evancho
Uniquely American
The Inaugural Tradition and the Promise of a More Perfect Union
hen the framers of the United States Constitution crafted our founding
document, they proclaimed that We, the People were creating a new form of
government in order to form a more perfect Union.
The framers of our Constitution understood that the government they had created was
imperfect, crafted from a series of compromises, and that perfection would be elusive. I
never expect to see a perfect work from imperfect man, explained Alexander Hamilton.
The framers also recognized that, for our government to endure, it must have the
ability to improve itself, to evolve in form and function, and to be guided by new ideas
and new personalities. To accommodate that need, they provided for constitutional
amendments, for the regular election of officials, and for the routine transfer of power.
At the end of the 18th century, it was widely believed that our republican form of
government was best suited to small, homogenous societies. However, the United States
rapidly grew in the 19th century in geography and population and our system of
government demonstrated its remarkable ability not just to accommodate that diversity,
but to draw strength from it.
In his second inaugural address in 1805, President Thomas Jefferson commented on
the acquisition of the Louisiana Purchase. The larger our association, he insisted, the
less will it be shaken by local passions. Jeffersons faith in association across space
would ultimately depend on knitting together the far-flung communities of the nation.
Today, as we celebrate the inauguration of the 45th President of the United States,
we honor this uniquely American constitutional quest. The peaceful transition
between presidential administrations signals that we are united as a people behind
an enduring republic.
In 1981 the inaugural ceremony struck President Ronald Reagan as being both
commonplace and miraculous. The orderly transfer of authority as called for in the
Constitution routinely takes place, as it has for almost two centuries, and few of us stop
to think how unique we really are, he said in his address. In the eyes of many in the
world, this every-four-year ceremony we accept as normal is nothing less than a miracle.
The inaugural ceremony may be a routine event, but it remains a unique symbol of
our constitutional system.
Uniquely American
The Inaugural Tradition and the Promise of a More Perfect Union
hen the framers of the United States Constitution crafted our founding
document, they proclaimed that We, the People were creating a new form of
government in order to form a more perfect Union.
The framers of our Constitution understood that the government they had created was
imperfect, crafted from a series of compromises, and that perfection would be elusive. I
never expect to see a perfect work from imperfect man, explained Alexander Hamilton.
The framers also recognized that, for our government to endure, it must have the
ability to improve itself, to evolve in form and function, and to be guided by new ideas
and new personalities. To accommodate that need, they provided for constitutional
amendments, for the regular election of officials, and for the routine transfer of power.
At the end of the 18th century, it was widely believed that our republican form of
government was best suited to small, homogenous societies. However, the United States
rapidly grew in the 19th century in geography and population and our system of
government demonstrated its remarkable ability not just to accommodate that diversity,
but to draw strength from it.
In his second inaugural address in 1805, President Thomas Jefferson commented on
the acquisition of the Louisiana Purchase. The larger our association, he insisted, the
less will it be shaken by local passions. Jeffersons faith in association across space
would ultimately depend on knitting together the far-flung communities of the nation.
Today, as we celebrate the inauguration of the 45th President of the United States,
we honor this uniquely American constitutional quest. The peaceful transition
between presidential administrations signals that we are united as a people behind
an enduring republic.
In 1981 the inaugural ceremony struck President Ronald Reagan as being both
commonplace and miraculous. The orderly transfer of authority as called for in the
Constitution routinely takes place, as it has for almost two centuries, and few of us stop
to think how unique we really are, he said in his address. In the eyes of many in the
world, this every-four-year ceremony we accept as normal is nothing less than a miracle.
The inaugural ceremony may be a routine event, but it remains a unique symbol of
our constitutional system.
These greater connections have required bridging the gap between competing
political and ideological visions, while protecting the political and civil rights of all
Americans. Through amendments to the Constitution, the phrase, We, the People
has been redefined by extending citizenship and expanding voting rights, reflecting
the realization that a nation cannot strive for perfection unless it embraces the full
participation of its citizens.
With each inauguration we embrace this uniquely American ceremony, seeing
in this extraordinary ritual a reflection of the nation itself. In times of peace or
war, of prosperity or crisis,
inaugurations strengthen the
national resolve to meet each
new challenge.
With malice toward none,
with charity for all, President
Abraham Lincoln proclaimed
in his second inaugural address,
delivered during the waning days
of the Civil War, let us strive on
to finish the work we are in, to
bind up the nations wounds.
During the depths of the
Great Depression, President
Franklin Roosevelt declared
his 1933 inauguration a day of
national consecration, in which
we face the arduous days that lie
before us in the warm courage of
national unity.
President George H. W. Bush
observed in 1989 that on inauguration day, we remember that
President Lincoln Taking the Oath at
we are all part of a continuum,
His
Second Inauguration, March 4, 1865
inescapably connected by the
Harpers Weekly, March 18, 1865, after a photograph by
ties that bind.
Alexander Gardner. U.S. Senate Commission on Art.
At the dawn of the 21st
In his second inaugural address, Lincoln expressed
the nations resolve to meet new challenges.
century, as President William
These greater connections have required bridging the gap between competing
political and ideological visions, while protecting the political and civil rights of all
Americans. Through amendments to the Constitution, the phrase, We, the People
has been redefined by extending citizenship and expanding voting rights, reflecting
the realization that a nation cannot strive for perfection unless it embraces the full
participation of its citizens.
With each inauguration we embrace this uniquely American ceremony, seeing
in this extraordinary ritual a reflection of the nation itself. In times of peace or
war, of prosperity or crisis,
inaugurations strengthen the
national resolve to meet each
new challenge.
With malice toward none,
with charity for all, President
Abraham Lincoln proclaimed
in his second inaugural address,
delivered during the waning days
of the Civil War, let us strive on
to finish the work we are in, to
bind up the nations wounds.
During the depths of the
Great Depression, President
Franklin Roosevelt declared
his 1933 inauguration a day of
national consecration, in which
we face the arduous days that lie
before us in the warm courage of
national unity.
President George H. W. Bush
observed in 1989 that on inauguration day, we remember that
President Lincoln Taking the Oath at
we are all part of a continuum,
His
Second Inauguration, March 4, 1865
inescapably connected by the
Harpers Weekly, March 18, 1865, after a photograph by
ties that bind.
Alexander Gardner. U.S. Senate Commission on Art.
At the dawn of the 21st
In his second inaugural address, Lincoln expressed
the nations resolve to meet new challenges.
century, as President William
Clinton proclaimed in his 1997 address, Americans had to shape the forces of the
information age and the global society, to unleash the limitless power of all our people,
and yes, to form a more perfect Union.
On January 20, 2017, we gather at the U.S. Capitol, the home of the legislature,
along with the executive, represented by the President, and the judiciary, embodied by
the Chief Justice of the United States who administers the oath. It is a meeting of the
three branches of the federal government, before the people, to observe the simple yet
momentous ritual of presidential oath taking.
Today, We, the People reaffirm a uniquely American foundation in popular
sovereignty, while recommitting ourselves to the pursuit of a more perfect union.