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Week Ahead: Trump Again Shows He's Willing To Use His Pardon Power

Drumstick and Wishbone, the National Thanksgiving Turkey and its alternate "wingman," are introduced Monday during an event hosted by The National Turkey Federation at the Williard InterContinental in Washington, D.C. One of the 40-pound fowl will be presented to President Trump at the White House on Tuesday, when he will ceremoniously "pardon" it.
Chip Somodevilla
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Getty Images
Drumstick and Wishbone, the National Thanksgiving Turkey and its alternate "wingman," are introduced Monday during an event hosted by The National Turkey Federation at the Williard InterContinental in Washington, D.C. One of the 40-pound fowl will be presented to President Trump at the White House on Tuesday, when he will ceremoniously "pardon" it.

President Trump has tweeted boldly about his power to pardon, used it once for a controversial ally, and this week he'll put his pardon pen to use for a couple of turkeys. Literally.

"President Donald J. Trump will pardon the National Thanksgiving Turkey in a ceremony in the Rose Garden," the White House confirmed in a statement.

The ceremony takes place Tuesday. It's the 70th year that the National Turkey Federation, the turkey growers' lobby, will be presenting the president with a turkey.

But the original intention wasn't to pardon turkeys; it was to do what most of the rest of us will do with them on Thanksgiving — eat them.

The ritual of presidents pardoning turkeys — rife with dad jokes — actually doesn't have that long a history.

President George H.W. Bush formalized the turkey pardon ceremony in 1989, and there were sporadic turkey pardons before that — some to distract from other controversies, like President Ronald Reagan trying to duck a question from a reporter he might have thought was a turkey — on the Iran-Contra scandal.

John F. Kennedy was the first president to pardon a Thanksgiving turkey, even though that one had a sign around its neck that read, "GOOD EATING, MR. PRESIDENT!"

"We'll just let this one grow," Kennedy said at the White House ceremony in 1963.

President John F. Kennedy is presented with a turkey by an industry group on Nov. 19, 1963. Kennedy gives the bird a reprieve, the first recorded presidential Thanksgiving turkey pardon.
Harvey Georges / AP
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AP
President John F. Kennedy is presented with a turkey by an industry group on Nov. 19, 1963. Kennedy gives the bird a reprieve, the first recorded presidential Thanksgiving turkey pardon.

(A little gravy on top of your deep-cuts turkey trivia: All evidence suggests Abraham Lincoln was actually the first president to pardon a turkey, but it was a Christmas turkey that his son had taken a liking to.)

This year's turkey pardon should be interesting to watch. It's Trump's first one. It's a lighthearted event, but Trump isn't known for his public laughter. Who will he bring out with him? The first lady? His youngest son Barron? Ivanka?

There haven't been very many Trump bird sightings, but there was that cover photo shoot for Time magazine in 2015.

It didn't go so well.

Trump should beware — sometimes these turkeys can be in a fowl mood.

President George W. Bush meets Liberty, the turkey he pardoned that year in the Rose Garden. Liberty got a little too close for comfort.
Tim Sloan / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
President George W. Bush meets Liberty, the turkey he pardoned that year in the Rose Garden. Liberty got a little too close for comfort.
President Reagan protects himself from flying feathers during the annual turkey presentation at the White House in 1984.
Scott Stewart / AP
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AP
President Reagan protects himself from flying feathers during the annual turkey presentation at the White House in 1984.

Other presidents have seemed to relish embarrassing their nearby children with turkey puns.

"Time flies, even if turkeys don't," President Obama said in 2015. That was met with silence, then polite laughter from his eye-rolling daughters, Sasha and Malia, as well as the audience.

President Obama's daughters, Sasha, middle, and Malia, right, look on as their father speaks, and jokes, before pardoning "Cheese" and his alternate "Mac" in 2014 at the White House turkey pardoning.
Mark Wilson / Getty Images
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Getty Images
President Obama's daughters, Sasha, middle, and Malia, right, look on as their father speaks, and jokes, before pardoning "Cheese" and his alternate "Mac" in 2014 at the White House turkey pardoning.

Last year, Obama threatened his daughters with the promise to "do this every year from now on. ... No way I'm cutting this habit cold turkey!"

How will Trump's puns stack up? (By the way, Trump did not reverse Obama's turkey pardons and order the remaining birds executed. That was fake news.)

Also, will he get his history right? When talking turkey, other presidents have erred.

"President Truman was the first president to pardon a turkey," Bill Clinton claimed at a pardoning ceremony in 1997.

But the Truman Presidential Library said in a statement that there's no evidence of that. In fact, the library said, "Truman sometimes indicated to reporters that the turkeys he received were destined for the family dinner table."

The president probably won't bring up the dark side of turkey pardoning. The birds are bred to be eaten, and because of their size, most don't live very long after their pardoning.

Because of that, animal-rights activists think this tradition should be canceled. In their view, you could say, it's ... for the birds.

Although instead of simply going to a farm to live out their — limited — days, the turkeys are now sent to Virginia Tech's Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences. Yes, that's a thing.

Of course, the other solution is to revert to the original purpose of the ceremony.

Buon appetito!

Domenico Montanaro is the lead political editor for NPR, an amateur presidential turkey pardon historian and proud Thanksgiving cook.

To brine or not to brine... Happy Thanksgiving!

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Domenico Montanaro
Domenico Montanaro is NPR's senior political editor/correspondent. Based in Washington, D.C., his work appears on air and online delivering analysis of the political climate in Washington and campaigns. He also helps edit political coverage.