From the Capitol to eBay, the hunt for tickets to Obama’s inauguration is fierce

(Melina Mara/ THE WASHINGTON POST ) - Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, said the group tries to distribute tickets “evenly and fairly.”

(Melina Mara/ THE WASHINGTON POST ) - Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, said the group tries to distribute tickets “evenly and fairly.”

They are among the most highly coveted items published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, offering the lucky and usually politically well-connected bearers a chance to witness history.

Tickets. Anybody got one?

Gallery

Gay rights advocates see Obama inaugural address as a watershed

Gay rights advocates see Obama inaugural address as a watershed

By using the word “gay” in his inaugural speech, Obama makes history and elevates a struggle.

The president liberals have been waiting for has (finally) arrived

The president liberals have been waiting for has (finally) arrived

THE FIX | To distill Obama's speech to a single sentence: "I'm the president, deal with it."

Full coverage: Obama’s inauguration

Full coverage: Obama’s inauguration

READ MORE | Coverage of the president’s inauguration, and analysis of what to expect in Obama’s next four years.

Obama’s inauguration, then and now

Obama’s inauguration, then and now

Washington Post photographers revisit scenes from President Obama’s first inauguration to see how this year compares.

Inauguration 2013: Explore the scene

Inauguration 2013: Explore the scene

Explore this interactive gigapixel panorama of the area outside the Capitol. Tag yourself and others.

President Obama’s second inauguration may not be quite as thrilling as the first, but the official release this week of 250,000 tickets for members of Congress and other government officials to hand out has incited a frenzy on Capitol Hill, with some lawmakers trying to score extras.

“There are many more people who want to come than we have tickets,” said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), who chairs the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, which released the color-coded tickets and began distributing them. “But we try to give them out evenly and fairly. From the newest freshman to the highest ranking, each member gets exactly the same number of tickets.”

Still, many lawmakers wonder if they received their fair share and suspect that a colleague may have nabbed more. Neither Schumer nor the committee’s spokesman would say how many tickets each lawmaker gets, though it appears to average at least a couple hundred.

There’s also an inequality of demand. The closer a representative’s district is to Washington, the more intense the jockeying by constituents, and the more likely his or her staff will be bugging other members of Congress for more tickets. And the bugging at times sounds a lot like begging.

Colleagues, constituents, volunteers — some people will try anything.

“Anybody that you’ve ever run across in the business can claim any kind of connection that would ring the bell,” said Kevin Hall, a spokesman for Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.). “At times, people are overly generous about what they’ve done for the boss over the years.”

Politicians in need sometimes go right to the top, pestering congressional leaders — who everyone assumes receive a bigger allotment. Others press lawmakers from distant states or Republican-friendly red states, hoping their constituents are too far away geographically or politically to show much interest in making the trip. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy to scare up extras.

“I think the tickets are so precious that unless you’re really far away, [or] you’re a Republican and you have very few constituents who want to come here, that the tickets are in high demand,” said Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (D-Va.).

His office received requests from 2,100 people, who asked for 10,577 tickets. Connelly has scared up at least two more from a Republican colleague. “And that’s because he represents Utah, where there wasn’t as much demand.”

From the perspective of some red states, the question might even be: What’s all the fuss?

“There are generally enough tickets to go around,” said Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), who gives his leftovers to his state’s senators or other lawmakers. “It’s not an issue.”

Once tickets are in hand, many members of Congress use lotteries to dole them out to constituents, though at least one California representative started a sort of mini essay contest. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D), who as the District’s nonvoting representative must try to meet some of the largest demand with the least political clout, makes potential ticket recipients promise they will attend, even if the weather is bad.

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges