Setting a sharp contrast with President Donald Trump, whose administration began with a fight over the size of his inaugural crowds, President-elect Joe Biden said Friday that he planned a scaled-back event for safety's sake during the pandemic.
The Democratic former vice president said he expected to be sworn in on January 20 on the platform being constructed on the steps of the U.S. Capitol but wanted to avoid the crowds that typically gather on the National Mall and along Pennsylvania Avenue to view the ceremony and parade.
"My guess is there probably will not be a gigantic inaugural parade down Pennsylvania Avenue. But my guess is you'll see a lot of virtual activity in states all across America, engaging even more people than before," Biden said in his hometown of Wilmington, where he is preparing his new administration.
Trump's administration memorably began in January 2017 with then-spokesman Sean Spicer berating the news media for publishing photos that showed far smaller crowds than had gathered for President Barack Obama's historic swearing in as the nation's first Black president eight years earlier.
Biden said his staff was working with the same team that produced August's largely online Democratic National Convention to plan a swearing-in that did not increase the risks of accelerating the spread of COVID-19, which has surged to a fresh record high in the United States.
"People want to celebrate," Biden said. "People want to be able to say we've passed the baton. We're moving on. Democracy has functioned."
The ceremony typically begins with the outgoing president and the president-elect riding together from the White House to the Capitol. After the new president is sworn in, he rides back along Pennsylvania Avenue to assume his new duties while the former president departs, typically by helicopter.
Trump, who has refused to concede the election, has not said if he will attend the ceremony. Instead, according to a source familiar with the internal White House discussion, he is considering launching his bid to run again in 2024 that day.
The pandemic has killed more than 273,000 people in the U.S., and cases and hospitalizations are surging as the winter months approach.