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AFP
Washington
A divided Washington led by the nation’s five living presidents put on a show of unity Wednesday at the poignant state funeral of George HW Bush, as America bade farewell to its 41st president.
Donald and Melania Trump shared a front row pew at Washington National Cathedral with past presidents Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter and their wives as an honor guard brought Bush’s flag-draped casket into the packed prayer hall.
George W. Bush delivered a rousing and deeply personal eulogy -- at times punctuated by laughter -- as he sang the praises of his father and predecessor as commander-in-chief, who died Friday at age 94.
“He was born with just two settings -- full throttle, then sleep,” Bush said. “To us, his was the brightest of a thousand points of light,” he added in reference to his father’s signature call to volunteerism.
“When the history books are written, they will say that George H.W. Bush was a great president of the United States.”
Bush’s eulogy followed an uplifting performance by Irish tenor Ronan Tynan -- a friend of Bush who sang to the president in his dying hours.
Wednesday’s state funeral caps a day-long homage that saw Bush lie in state for two days in the US Capitol rotunda. Since Bush’s death, Trump has traded his usual provocative posture for one of respect and solemnity, tweeting before heading to the cathedral about “a day of celebration for a great man.”
But while the service allowed Washington to hit pause on the toxic rhetoric that has engulfed the country’s politics, Trump and his Democratic predecessors appeared locked in an uneasy truce as it got underway.
Trump arrived and promptly shook hands with Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama. But his greetings stopped there, as he failed to acknowledge Hillary Clinton, his defeated Democratic rival in 2016.
Clinton sat stone faced, looking straight ahead, and the pair did not make eye contact.
Other dignitaries in the cathedral included Britain’s Prince Charles, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, former Polish president Lech Walesa, former vice presidents Dan Quayle, Dick Cheney, Al Gore and Joe Biden, and former secretaries of state James Baker, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice.
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06/12/2018
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