The federal holidays are listed at 5 U.S.C. §6103(a). The one celebrated on “the third Monday in February” is “Washington’s Birthday”. Not “Presidents’ Day”. (Contrary to what I long believed and the Internet will tell you, Richard Nixon did not rename it sub rosa when he issued his executive order implementing the federal Uniform Monday Holiday Act.)
Some commentators object to the term “Presidents’ Day” because it doles out a smidgen of honor to Presidents who were mediocre or worse. Everyone can furnish his own examples, which became more frequent after Ronald Reagan left the White House. I have a more fundamental objection: The President is only one branch of the government, not an embodiment of the whole. He is not a monarch. If he were, it would be fitting and proper to set aside a day to mark the incumbent’s birth (as is done in Great Britain, where King Charles III is officially honored on the third Saturday in June). Because he is not, it is grotesque to give his portion of the nation’s political structure recognition that is denied to the rest.
Until we have a “Congress Day” and a “Supreme Court and Federal Judiciary Day”, let’s stick singling out our first President.
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