The Delaware Gazette

Swearing age-old oath, Obama steps into 2nd term

Pres­i­dent Barack Obama is offi­cially sworn-in by Chief Jus­tice John Roberts, not pic­tured, in the Blue Room of the White House Sun­day, as first lady Michelle Obama holds the Robin­son Fam­ily Bible. (For the Asso­ci­ated Press | Doug Mills)


DAVID ESPO

AP Spe­cial Correspondent

WASHINGTON — Pres­i­dent Barack Obama was sworn in for four more years Sun­day in a sim­ple cer­e­mony at the White House, embark­ing on a second-term quest to restore a still-shaky econ­omy and com­bat ter­ror­ists over­seas while swear­ing an age-old oath to “pre­serve, pro­tect and defend” the Constitution.

“I did it,” a smil­ing pres­i­dent said to his daugh­ter Sasha sec­onds after fol­low­ing Chief Jus­tice John Roberts in recit­ing the oath of office. First lady Michelle Obama and the couple’s other daugh­ter, Malia, were among rel­a­tives who bore witness.

The quiet moments were pre­lude to Monday’s pub­lic inau­gural events when Obama and Vice Pres­i­dent Joe Biden will be sworn in on the steps of the U.S. Capi­tol before a crowd expected to reach into the hun­dreds of thou­sands and a tele­vi­sion audi­ence counted in the millions.

The trap­pings were in place — the flag-draped stands ready out­side the Capi­tol and the tables set inside for a tra­di­tional lunch with law­mak­ers. Across town, a spe­cially made review­ing stand rested out­side the White House gates for the pres­i­dent and guests to watch the tra­di­tional parade down Penn­syl­va­nia Avenue.

A crowd of per­haps 800,000 was fore­cast, less than the million-plus that thronged to the nation’s cap­i­tal four years ago to wit­ness the inau­gu­ra­tion of the first black pres­i­dent in Amer­i­can history.

The weather fore­cast was encour­ag­ing, to a point. High tem­per­a­tures were pre­dicted for the lower 40s dur­ing the day, with scat­tered snow show­ers dur­ing the evening, when two inau­gural balls closed out the offi­cial proceedings.

The 44th chief exec­u­tive is only the 17th to win re-election, and his second-term goals are ambi­tious for a coun­try where sharp polit­i­cal dif­fer­ences have pro­duced grid­locked gov­ern­ment in recent years.

Restora­tion of the econ­omy to full strength and press­ing the world­wide cam­paign against ter­ror­ists sit atop the agenda. He also wants to reduce fed­eral deficits and win immi­gra­tion and gun con­trol leg­is­la­tion from Con­gress, where Repub­li­cans con­trol the House.

If he needed a reminder of the chal­lenges he faces, he got one from half-way around the globe. An Alger­ian secu­rity offi­cial dis­closed the dis­cov­ery of 25 addi­tional bod­ies at a gas plant where rad­i­cal Islamists last week took dozens of for­eign work­ers hostage.

In Wash­ing­ton, tourists strolled leisurely on an unsea­son­ably warm day.

“I’m very proud of him and what he’s try­ing to do for immi­gra­tion, women’s rights, what they call ‘Oba­macare,’ and con­cerns for the mid­dle class,” said Patri­cia Mer­ritt, a retired edu­ca­tor from San Anto­nio, in town with her daugh­ter and grand­daugh­ter to see the inau­gu­ra­tion and parade as well as his­toric sites. “I think he’s more dis­re­spected than any other pres­i­dent,” she added, refer­ring to his critics.

Sean Pay­ton, an oper­a­tions ana­lyst from High­land Ranch, Colo., said he hoped to hear “a nice elo­quent speech that makes peo­ple feel good about being an American.”

Repub­li­cans lent a touch of bipar­ti­san­ship to the weekend.

“We always want any pres­i­dent to suc­ceed, to do well, that means Amer­ica does well and Amer­i­cans do well,” Sen. John Bar­rasso of Wyoming said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Obama took the oath in the White House Blue Room where por­traits of Pres­i­dents John Adams, Thomas Jef­fer­son, James Madi­son and John Tyler grace the walls. He placed a hand on a Bible held by his wife. His daugh­ters stood nearby.

The nation’s polit­i­cal divi­sions seemed scarcely to intrude as Obama, a Demo­c­rat, shook hands with Roberts, a Repub­li­can appointee, in a rite that renews Amer­i­can democ­racy every four years. Unlike four years ago, when Roberts stum­bled ver­bally, the chief jus­tice recited the oath with­out error.

Before the swearing-in, the pres­i­dent lis­tened from a second-row pew at the 175-year-old Met­ro­pol­i­tan African Methodist Epis­co­pal Church as the Rev. Jonathan V. New­man asked God’s bless­ing for the him and his fam­ily. “But also pre­pare him for bat­tle … because some­times ene­mies insist on doing it the hard way,” he said.

Like Obama, Biden began his day early. He attended Catholic Mass at his offi­cial res­i­dence at the U.S. Naval Obser­va­tory a few miles from the White House. Jus­tice Sonia Sotomayor, the first His­panic jus­tice and an Obama appointee, admin­is­tered the oath of office.

Biden then joined Obama at the ceme­tery, where the two men placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns and observed a moment of silence as a bugler sounded “Taps.”

AP News Posted by on Jan 20 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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