Presidential Medal of Freedom: Biden honors activists, astronauts and Olympians

  • By Bernd Debusmann Jr.
  • BBC News, Washington

video subtitles, Watch: Biden makes age joke at 2024 Medal of Freedom ceremony

President Joe Biden has awarded the highest civilian honor in the United States to activists, astronauts and Olympians at the White House.

Among the 19 recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom was Jim Thorpe, the first Native American to win a gold medal. He died in 1953.

Biden also recognized the most decorated swimmer in history, Katie Ledecky.

Many of the recipients were Biden’s fellow Democrats.

They include two who ran for president: former Vice President Al Gore and former Secretary of State John Kerry, who just resigned as US special climate envoy.

Another, Nancy Pelosi, was the first woman to serve as speaker of the House of Representatives.

“History will remember her as the greatest speaker,” Biden told her in brief comments.

Business magnate and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was also recognized.

Image source, fake images

Screenshot, Ellen Ochoa aboard the space shuttle Discovery

Other innovators honored were Ellen Ochoa, the first Hispanic woman in space, and Michelle Yeoh, the first Asian to win an Oscar for Best Actress.

At Friday’s ceremony, Biden mistakenly referred to her as “Michael Yeoh” before quickly correcting himself.

Teresa Romero, the first Latina to become president of a national union, the United Farm Workers, was recognized.

So was Phil Donahue, the first television producer to include audience participation in a daytime talk show.

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Screenshot, Jim Thorpe won gold in the pentathlon and decathlon in 1912.

One of the activists who received a medal was Opal Lee, who advocated for Juneteenth to become a federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States. Biden declared Juneteenth a national holiday during his first year in office.

The president also awarded medals to civil rights leaders Clarence B Jones, who helped write Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s I Have a Dream speech, and Medgar Evers, who died in 1963, as well as Gregory Boyle, founder of Homeboy Industries, and Judy Shepard. , activist against hate crimes.

The medals are awarded to individuals who have made significant contributions to American art, culture, and society.

One of this year’s medals will go to Jane Rigby, chief scientist of the James Webb Telescope, the most powerful telescope in the world.