Jimmy Carter now the longest-living US president in history
Nearly four decades after voters unceremoniously rejected President
Jimmy Carter’s bid for a second term, the 39th president has reached a
milestone that electoral math cannot dispute: He is now the
longest-living chief executive in American history.
Friday is the 172nd day beyond Carter’s 94th birthday, exceeding by
one day the lifespan of former President George H.W. Bush, who died Nov.
30 at the age of 94 years, 171 days. Both men were born in 1924: Bush
on June 12, Carter on Oct. 1.
It’s yet another post-presidency distinction for Carter, whose legacy
since leaving office has long overshadowed both his rocky White House
tenure and the remarkable political rise that led him from his family
peanut farm and a state Senate seat to the governor’s mansion and his
unlikely presidential victory in 1976.
The achievement also defies medical odds, coming more than three
years after Carter announced he had melanoma that had spread to his
liver and brain. He underwent treatment and received a clean bill of
health.
“There are no special celebrations planned,” said Deanna Congileo,
spokeswoman for the former president and The Carter Center, which Carter
and his wife, Rosaylnn, now 91, founded in Atlanta in 1982 to focus on
global human rights issues.
The center’s decades of public health advocacy, election monitoring
and conflict resolution around the world have redefined the role of
former presidents, who before Carter often retired to relative
obscurity.
“We at The Carter Center sure are rooting for him and grateful for
his long life of service that has benefited millions of the world’s
poorest people,” Congileo said.
Seemingly downplaying his political career, Carter has for years
characterized the center’s work as his defining professional achievement
— though, of course, having been a US president is what allowed him the
stature to establish the center.
“I spent four of my ninety years in the White House, and they were,
of course, the pinnacle of my political life,” Carter wrote in a memoir
published on his 90th birthday.
“Those years, though, do not dominate my chain of memories, and there
was never an orderly or planned path to get there during my early
life.”
Rather, he continued, “Teaching, writing and helping The Carter Center evolve … seem to constitute the high points in my life.”
And the man who once held the US nuclear codes, forged a historic
Middle East peace deal at Camp David and tried to manage a hostage
crisis that sealed his one-term fate has a simple answer whenever he’s
asked to recount the best or most significant decision he’s ever made:
“Asking Rosalynn to marry me.”
The former president and first lady still live in Plains, Georgia, a
town of about 750 where they were born, raised and married 73 years ago,
weeks after the future commander-in-chief graduated from the US Naval
Academy.
A devout Christian, Jimmy Carter regularly teaches Sunday school at
Maranatha Baptist Church, drawing hundreds of visitors to Plains for
each session. The Carters pose for pictures with each attendee.
Though he sometimes de-emphasizes his elected career, living so long
after his presidency is allowing Carter a resurgence of sorts in
Democratic politics.
Two current presidential candidates, Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey
and Amy Klobuchar of Minneosta, have ventured to Plains to meet with the
Carters. The former president has hosted Bernie Sanders, a 2016 and
2020 presidential candidate, for a panel at The Carter Centre — and
Carter told the audience that he voted for Sanders over Hillary Clinton
in the 2016 Democratic primary. He hosted and endorsed Georgia Democrat
Stacey Abrams in her unsuccessful bid for Georgia governor last year.
Georgia Democrats say they expect more presidential candidates to make a Plains pilgrimage.
As for what’s next, Carter has at least one more accomplishment on
his mind, pointing often to The Carter Center’s long-running effort to
eliminate Guinea worm disease, a parasitic infection attributed to poor
drinking water.
There were 3.5 million cases in 21 countries in 1986, when The Carter Centre began its eradication program. In 2018, there were 28 cases
worldwide.
“I’m hoping that I will live longer than the last Guinea worm,” he
said in a British television interview in 2016. “That’s one of my goals
in life, and I think I have a good chance to succeed.”
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