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On Jan 20, Handshake Man won’t be there

A confounding and perhaps divinely inspired Inauguration Day tradition is coming to an end: Handshake Man says he can’t make it to the celebration on January 20.

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A confounding and perhaps divinely inspired Inauguration Day tradition is coming to an end: Handshake Man says he can’t make it to the celebration on January 20.

President-elect Barack Obama will miss that special greeting experienced by Bill Clinton at his second inauguration and George W Bush at his first: An overcoated, entirely normal-looking man, whose only security clearance is his beatific smile, steps from the crowd after the swearing-in. He offers the new commander-in-chief a handshake, a medallion and a message from God.

The Rev Richard C “Rich” Weaver — dubbed Handshake Man — has been Washington’s most famous uninvited guest. Now in his early 60s, he has reached out and touched six presidents and countless senators. He was the ultimate man-without-a-ticket, the scourge of the Secret Service and Capitol Police, a hero to wedding crashers and gate jumpers everywhere.

When asked how he penetrated the tightest of security bubbles, Weaver would say simply: “It’s just God, buddy.”

Now he’s on the phone from Southern California, where he lives. “I have decided to not do any more with presidents,” he says. Also: “I’ve got one more year where I’m not allowed to go to Washington,” he says.

That’s right. Caesar’s law finally caught up to the free spirit who always said he listened to God first. But Weaver says he still has a divine message for Obama. He’s just not going to be able to deliver it in person.

It was at Bush’s second inauguration in 2005 that the Capitol Police finally got their man. Officers had been ordered to memorise Weaver’s face from pictures, and he was busted at a checkpoint near the House-side entrance to the Capitol. Weaver pleaded guilty to misdemeanor unlawful entry and was sentenced to unsupervised probation. He was barred from trying to attend presidential events for five years.

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Then last week, Weaver says, he was watching television when another message from God came to him. “The glory of the Lord has departed from the Democratic Party,” Weaver says, reading from the message. “You have chosen a secular messiah… You will see the Democrats take America farther down the road to insecurity.”

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