US tightens security before Joe Biden’s inauguration

Presidential swearing in will be the most secured since President Abraham Lincoln inaugurations, before and during the Civil War.

A National Guard stands at the US Capitol before the inauguration in Washington, DC [Liz Lynch/Getty Images/AFP]

Washington, DC — Tall fences topped with thick, spiralling razor wire encased the US Capitol area on Friday, as thousands of heavily armed National Guardsmen stood watch. Bridges leading into the city will be closed beginning this weekend. Access to the grounds will be highly restricted.

In many ways, the lead-up to the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden more resembles the visit of a head of state to a military encampment in a warzone than it does the swearing-in of the president of the United States at the building housing the nation’s legislature.

The swearing-in of the 46th president will lack not just the pomp and pageantry of years past, but also the symbolic openness characteristic of the peaceful transfer of power in what is perhaps the world’s proudest democracy.

This year’s festivities will differ in three key and unprecedented ways, according to experts: First, the city is locked down in anticipation of more violence after the attack on the Capitol building last week by armed supporters of President Donald Trump.

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Second, Trump has refused to attend the ceremony, still smarting from his loss and insisting the election was stolen.

Third, the inauguration festivities will be broadly downsized to prevent the spread of COVID-19, as the country still struggles to contain the deadly pandemic.

Crews install razor wire on top of the fencing that now surrounds the US Capitol before the inauguration in Washington, DC. After last week’s Capitol Riot, the FBI has warned of additional threats against the US Capitol and in all 50 states [Liz Lynch/Getty Images/AFP]

Security on high alert

Chuck Hagel, who served as President Barack Obama’s secretary of defense and as a Republican US senator before that, said this will be the most significantly secured inauguration since President Abraham Lincoln’s swearing-ins in 1861 and 1865, just before and during the Civil War.

Although Trump and Obama also faced credible threats and protests on the days of their inauguration, Hagel said this level of militarisation of Washington, DC, is unheard of, and disheartening, even if it’s necessary given the fallout from the insurrection at the Capitol last week. It is likely to reflect badly not just at home, but also abroad, he said.

“It’s a sad day for America,” Hagel said in a telephone interview. “When the world sees this and what they saw last week, they’ll have really considerable doubt: ‘Is America as good as we think they are?’”

“It will be not the symbolism that we normally have always had, a wise country that can transfer power peacefully, and that can democratically function with different points of view,” Hagel continued.

“That will hurt not only our image, but the confidence that other countries have in us and the trust they have they have in us, especially our allies, and our friends and our partners.”

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Indeed, the ways in which this year’s inauguration differs from past years in terms of security are too many to list.

The US capital city is already highly fortified several days out from the main event. Throngs of National Guardsmen have been sleeping on the floor of the Capitol building as their compatriots guard fenced roadblocks around the premises alongside large beige military trucks.

Members of the National Guard rest in the Capitol Visitors Center on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC [Saul Loeb/AFP]

Officials have announced that as many as 25,000 of these troops will be available to secure the event, not to mention stepped up forces from the FBI, US Secret Service, Department of Homeland Security, Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department and US Capitol Police.

Essentially all vehicular traffic into and out of downtown Washington, DC, and around the National Mall and the monuments will be shut down through Thursday, including several main bridges that serve as arteries back and forth from northern Virginia across the Potomac River and southern Maryland across the Anacostia River.

In-person attendance will also be sharply restricted. The National Park Service announced Friday they would allow only two “First Amendment Zones” on Pennsylvania Avenue, the road connecting the Capitol to the White House.

Therein, only 100 people in at a time can amass, a far cry from the record estimated nearly two million people cheering on Obama’s first inauguration in 2009 or roughly half a million strong pink-hat clad Women’s March protesters who took to the streets the day after Trump’s inauguration in 2017.

Members of the US National Guard are seen downtown Washington, DC as preparations are made for the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden as the 46th US President [Daniel Slim/AFP]

Where’s Trump?

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Also glaringly absent from the day’s events will be Trump himself. Not since President Andrew Johnson refused to attend the swearing-in of President Ulysses S Grant 152 years ago has an incumbent president refused to attend his successor’s swearing-in.

In 2017, the Obamas greeted the Trumps with handshakes at the White House steps. President George HW Bush famously left a handwritten note for President Bill Clinton and sat through the inauguration, just after Clinton made him a one-term president. Even amid the rancour of the 2016 election, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton attended with her husband, the former president.

Trump will be absent not just from the public events. Traditionally, incoming and outgoing presidents and their spouses start Inauguration Day with a tea or coffee meeting at the White House and participate in a wreath-laying at Arlington National Cemetery, a military graveyard just across the Potomac River in Virginia.

Trump, however, will be leaving the city Wednesday morning, before the inauguration, to begin his post-presidential life in Florida.

“I feel sad about it, because I like tradition,” said Elizabeth Goldsmith, an inauguration historian and professor emerita at Florida State University. “It’s just celebratory, usually, of the old to the new, you know, the day to say that’s that.”

Members of the National Guard stand at a roadblock as preparations are made before the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden [Brendan Smialowski/AFP]

Still, Alan Fitts, who directed the Capitol operations for the Presidential Inaugural Committee for Obama’s second inauguration in 2013, said that despite Trump’s refusal to model publicly an unbroken chain of presidential succession, the event organisers will find ways to pull it off.

For instance, Vice President Mike Pence is scheduled to attend the ceremony, and Obama, Clinton and President George W Bush will accompany Biden to the wreath-laying ceremony.

“Symbolically, they will find ways to essentially demonstrate Biden taking his place in that lineage,” Fitts said.

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“You still establish Biden within this chain of presidents that way, and so symbolically, he assumes the mantle. You put him alongside these presidents as the new president.”

Coronavirus still lingers

Though the security enhancements are a newer development, much of the day’s festivities were already scaled back for reasons having less to do with physical threats and more to do with a biological threat: COVID-19.

As a result, perhaps the most apparent divergence from years past that will be apparent to audiences watching on television will be how sparsely attended it will be.

Members of the National Guard walk up an empty Constitution Avenue alongside the US Capitol in Washington, DC before next week’s presidential inauguration of US President-elect Joe Biden [Saul Loeb/AFP]

Access to the National Mall had already been largely restricted to abide by social distancing guidelines before any additional security precautions were put in place, and a traditional parade from the Capitol to the White House and an inaugural concert have both been made virtual.

Even chairs on the West Front of the Capitol will be spaced six feet apart, allowing for far fewer attendees. Everyone who does attend must first pass a coronavirus test at least a few days before the event.

Contrary to years past, when members of Congress were given as many as 200 or more tickets to hand out to constituents, they are being limited to one ticket for themselves, and another for a guest, said former Representative Gregg Harper, who will be flying in from Mississippi for the event.

“It will look very, very different in that regard,” said Harper, a Republican and the former chairman of the House Administration Committee.

“The biggest visual of all will be the low number of people that will actually get to attend this inauguration, with social distancing and ticket limitations. That’s going to be really significant.”

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Source: Al Jazeera

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