Biden to pardon Indiana turkeys Peanut Butter, Jelly for Thanksgiving

Reuters

WASHINGTON – U.S. President Joe Biden will pardon two turkeys from Indiana named Peanut Butter and Jelly at the White House on Friday, carrying on a decades-old Thanksgiving tradition.

The birds, perched on side-by-side hotel-style beds with crested headboards, were featured in a short video the White House tweeted out Thursday, exactly a week before the holiday, which falls on Nov. 25 this year.

In 1947, President Harry Truman was the first recipient of a bird gifted by America’s turkey farmers, a tradition that continued. In 1963, President John Kennedy decided to send his gift back to the farm where it came from.

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George H.W. Bush was the first president to officially offer a turkey pardon at the White House in 1989. Barack Obama’s pardons featured jokes that often had his daughters rolling their eyes at his side.


In 2020, then-President Donald Trump emerged from a self-imposed isolation he began after losing the November presidential election to pardon Corn, a 42-pound (19-kg) turkey.


(This story refiles to show the turkeys will be pardoned on Friday, not on Thanksgiving; edits)

(Reporting by Heather Timmons; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Sandra Maler)

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