Speaker Johnson orders US Capitol flags raised to full height for Trump's inauguration

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson attends a ceremony for former President Jimmy Carter, at the Capitol, Jan. 7, in Washington. Johnson ordered that flags at the U.S. Capitol be raised to their full height on Inauguration Day.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson attends a ceremony for former President Jimmy Carter, at the Capitol, Jan. 7, in Washington. Johnson ordered that flags at the U.S. Capitol be raised to their full height on Inauguration Day. (Kent Nishimura, The New York Times via AP)


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WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday ordered that flags at the U.S. Capitol be raised to their full height on Inauguration Day, pausing a 30-day flag-lowering order following the death of former President Jimmy Carter.

The Republican leader's decision means that President-elect Donald Trump will not take the oath of office for his second term under a half-staff flag, a prospect that he had previously complained about.

It mirrors actions taken in recent days by some Republican governors who have announced that flags in their states would be raised on Inauguration Day to mark Trump's second term.

North Dakota Gov. Kelly Armstrong, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee did so on Tuesday, noting in announcements that U.S. flags across their states would be relowered on Jan. 21 in honor of Carter. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a similar notice on Monday.

The 30-day flag-lowering period, set into motion with President Joe Biden's initial order, affects flags at federal government buildings and their grounds, as well as at U.S. embassies and other facilities abroad, including military installations and vessels. It runs through Jan. 28, which encompasses Trump's inauguration and first week in office. In line with Biden's order, governors throughout the country issued their own orders to govern flags in their respective states.

The incoming president has expressed consternation that flags would still be lowered when he takes the oath, and it's possible that he could order the overall reversal of Biden's decision once he's installed as president on Jan. 20.

"Democrats are all 'giddy'" about the notion that flags will be lowered on Inauguration Day," Trump wrote Jan. 3 on social media.

"Nobody wants to see this," Trump wrote. He added that "no American can be happy about it. Let's see how it plays out. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"

Trump has already taken action over the flags that he can control: at his home in Florida. In the days following Carter's burial, a large U.S. flag at Trump's private Mar-a-Lago club was observed already flying at its full height, despite an order from DeSantis that mirrors Biden's.

As of Tuesday, DeSantis had not made alterations to the flag order in his own state.

The U.S. flag code lays out parameters for lowering the U.S. flag to half-staff, including a 30-day period for current or former presidents to cover flags at federal government buildings and their grounds, as well as at U.S. embassies and other facilities abroad, including military installations and vessels.

Contributing: Kimberly Chandler, John Hanna, Kimberlee Kruesi and Stephany Matat

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