The Capital

Biden says Carter, 98, has asked him to deliver eulogy at his funeral

- By Bill Barrow

“I spent time with Jimmy Carter and it’s finally caught up with him, but they found a way to keep him going for a lot longer than they anticipate­d because they found a breakthrou­gh.”

— President Joe Biden

ATLANTA — President Joe Biden says he plans to deliver the eulogy at the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter, who remains under hospice care at his home in south Georgia.

Biden told donors at a California fundraiser this week about a visit to see the 39th president, whom he has known since he was a young Delaware senator supporting Carter’s 1976 presidenti­al campaign.

“He asked me to do his eulogy,” Biden said, before stopping himself from saying more. “Excuse me, I shouldn’t say that.”

Carter, who at 98 is the longest-lived U.S. president, announced Feb. 18 that he would spend his remaining days at home receiving end-of-life care, forgoing further medical interventi­on after a series of short hospital stays.

The Carter Center in Atlanta and the former president’s family members have not disclosed details of his condition, though Biden alluded to Carter’s 2015 cancer diagnosis and subsequent recovery.

Some Carter family members have confirmed that the former president will have a state funeral in Washington, along with a private funeral and burial in Plains, Georgia.

“I spent time with Jimmy Carter and it’s finally caught up with him, but they found a way to keep him going for a lot longer than they anticipate­d because they found a breakthrou­gh,” Biden said in Rancho Sante Fe, Calif.

Biden, 80, and first lady Jill Biden visited Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, 95, at their home in Plain a few months after Biden took office in 2021.

Biden was the first U.S. senator to endorse Carter’s 1976 presidenti­al bid, breaking from the Washington establishm­ent that Carter — then a former one-time Georgia governor — shocked by winning the Democratic nomination.

Biden’s presidency represents a turnabout, of sorts, for Carter’s political standing. He served one term and lost in a landslide to Republican Ronald Reagan in 1980, prompting top Democrats to keep their distance, at least publicly.

Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama did not have close relationsh­ips with Carter. And the longshot presidenti­al candidates who sometimes ventured to Plains over the years typically did so privately.

But as the Carters’ global humanitari­an work and advocacy of democracy via the Carter Center garnered new respect, Democratic politician­s began publicly circulatin­g back to south Georgia ahead of the 2020 election cycle. And with Biden’s election, Carter again found a genuine friend and ally in the Oval Office.

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