Politics & Government
Nebraskans Celebrate Gov. Jim Pillen At His Inaugural Ball
The Omaha event featured 3,500 guests.

By Aaron Sanderford
January 7, 2023
Find out what's happening in Omahafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
OMAHA — About 3,500 Nebraskans dined, danced and feted the state’s new governor Saturday evening at the CHI Health Center convention center in downtown Omaha.
Gov. Jim Pillen’s inaugural ball attracted former governors and U.S. senators, including Ben Nelson and Mike Johanns.
Find out what's happening in Omahafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
It attracted state senators from both parties, including Suzanne Geist, Steve Erdman, Terrell McKinney and Tony Vargas.
One of Pillen’s top supporters, former Gov. Pete Ricketts, greeted people at a reception before the ball.
Outside that upstairs ballroom, Pillen and First Lady Suzanne Pillen posed for pictures with a line of attendees.
Ricketts, in a brief interview before dinner, described the emotions of his own first inaugural ball.
“There’s a lot of people that you know and love,” he said, “and you get like two minutes with each of them.”
Ricketts called it “a wedding reception except on steroids.” He said Pillen is likely thinking back to what it took to run.
In 2014, Ricketts spent most of the night posing for pictures, he said. On Saturday evening, he got to relax and enjoy Pillen’s moment.
“I’m really happy for him,” he said.
Pillen, as a former Husker, picked a theme for his inaugural from his old coach, Tom Osborne: “Day by Day, Better and Better.”
Pillen, answering questions during dinner, said he was pleased to see Nebraskans gathering together.
He said his dad would have told him that the crowd was there to celebrate the office, not him.
Pillen said he would do his best to get through the dance with his wife and the walk out on stage.
“I’m a pretty slow two-stepper, so I think we’ll do OK” he said. “I really hope when we do the run down the runway that my grandbabies are crazy.”
Pillen, a hog operator from Columbus, laughed when asked about serving pork at an inaugural ball in the Beef State.
He said the cattle guys give him a hard time, in jest, but the meal was Nebraska-raised pork, processed in Fremont, and Nebraska-raised potatoes.
“Tonight is Nebraska, through and through, every square inch of it,” the new governor said
Unlike at some previous balls in Lincoln, Pillen was able to get his supporters into a single room of the conference hall.
The governor and First Lady, after being introduced to the crowd, were set to dance to the Rod Stewart version of “What a Wonderful World.”
Nebraskans want accountability from their elected officials and government. They want to know whether their tax dollars are being well-spent, whether state agencies and local governments are responsive to the people and whether officials, programs and policies are working for the common good. The Nebraska Examiner is a nonprofit, independent news source committed to providing news, scoops and reports important to our state.