The Guardian (USA)

Joe Biden's Oval Office: what changes has the new president made?

- Luke Harding

The Oval Office has long symbolised the power and grandeur of the US presidency, and incoming White House incumbents traditiona­lly change the decor to reflect the tone of their administra­tion.

Joe Biden has unveiled the new ceremonial backdrop to his administra­tion, marking a number of significan­t changes from that of his predecesso­r.

Curtains

Biden kept the curtains that hung during Donald Trump’s administra­tion and had previously been used during Bill Clinton’s presidency. The carpet, taken from storage, is a darker blue than the Trump model.

Cesar Chavez bust

Immediatel­y behind Biden is a bust of Cesar Chavez, the civil rights activist and leftwing labour leader. Other busts on display include Martin Luther King Jr, Rosa Parks, Eleanor Roosevelt and

Robert F Kennedy. One prominent head from the Trump era has been taken away: Winston Churchill’s.

Benjamin Franklin portrait

On the right of the picture is a painting of Benjamin Franklin, a founding father and consummate all-rounder. The portrait represents Biden’s interest in science and hangs near a bookshelf with a chunk of moon rock.

In another piece of symbolism, Biden has removed the portrait of Andrew Jackson, the US’s populist seventh president, whose white nationalis­t views foreshadow­ed Trump’s own. Directly in front of Biden, and out of shot, is a massive portrait of Franklin D Roosevelt.

Roosevelt is joined by the formerpres­ident Thomas Jefferson and former treasury secretary Alexander Hamilton, together with George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Resolute desk

Piled up on the famous Resolute desk are a heap of executive orders in green folders, signed on Wednesday by Biden. They mark a tearing up of Trump’s legacy and include a decision to rejoin the Paris climate treaty and the World Health Organizati­on.

Pens

Presidents have traditiona­lly used multiple pens to sign significan­t legislatio­n. These are then given to key individual­s as souvenirs. Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr – whose busts are now in the Biden Oval Office – both received pens from Lyndon Johnson when Johnson signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act

Family photos

On an ornate table behind the president are various family photograph­s, including a framed picture of Biden’s late and much-missed son, Capt Beau Biden. Also visible is the president’s mother, Catherine Eugenia Finnegan, as well as the first lady, Dr Jill Biden, and their three children, plus other family members. Oh, and a snap of Biden, a Catholic, meeting Pope Francis.

Harry Truman

On the table to the right is a bust of the former president Harry Truman, Roosevelt’s successor and another onetime vice-president who made it to the top job.

 ??  ?? The Oval Office of the White House, newly redecorate­d for the first day of Joe Biden’s administra­tion. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP
The Oval Office of the White House, newly redecorate­d for the first day of Joe Biden’s administra­tion. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP
 ??  ?? Joe Biden in the newly decorated Oval Office with darker gold curtains. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Joe Biden in the newly decorated Oval Office with darker gold curtains. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

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