WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama took the oath of office Sunday to
begin a second term threatened by strife at home and abroad and amid
inaugural rituals lacking the hope and historic promise of 2009.
Obama, with a slight smile, took the oath at an intimate, private
ceremony in the Blue Room of the White House lasting less than a minute,
raising his right arm and placing his left hand on a family Bible.
The president solemnly swore to “faithfully execute the office of
President of the United States” and to “preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States, so help me God.”
Chief Justice Roberts, who stumbled when swearing in Obama to open
his first term in 2009, read each line of the oath out loud, before the
president repeated words first intoned by George Washington, 224 years
ago.
After a ceremony lasting less than a minute, Obama hugged his wife,
and children Malia, 14 and Sasha, 11 before quipping: “I did it” to his
youngest daughter.
Obama will take the oath of office for a second time at a time-honored outdoor public ceremony at the US Capitol on Monday.
Malia
Obama (2nd R) and Sasha Obama (R) watch as US Supreme Court Chief
Justice John Roberts (2nd L) administers the oath of office to US
President Barack Obama for a second term in the Blue Room of the White
House. AFP PHOTO
Vice President Joe Biden was sworn in before his boss at an early
morning ceremony at his official residence, before the two laid a wreath
at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Ceremony.
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor — picked by Obama to be the
first Hispanic judge to sit on the top court in his first term — made
her own slice of history by leading Biden as he took the oath.
As his first term waned, Obama worshipped at a prominent African
American church in Washington, where the Reverend Ronald Braxton adapted
the “Forward” motto of the president’s re-election campaign to the
story of Moses.
“Forward was the only option,” said Braxton.
Obama, 51, will embark on a second term at a time of deep partisan
division in Washington, and will face foreign crises testing his legacy,
including Iran’s nuclear program and resurgent Islamist militancy in
North Africa.
Senior aide David Plouffe said the president would use his second
inaugural address before an expected 500,000 plus crowd — much smaller
than in 2009 — to stress the national truths Americans share.
“He is going to talk about how our founding principles and values can
still guide us in today’s modern and changing world,” Plouffe said on
the ABC News show “This Week.”
“He is going to say that our political system does not require us to
resolve all of our differences or settle all of our disputes, but it is
absolutely imperative that our leaders try and seek common ground.”
Obama’s second inauguration, which comes courtesy of an election win
over Republican Mitt Romney in November, lacks the historical resonance
of January 20, 2009, when he was sworn in as the first black American
president.
Since then, a graying Obama has struggled to accelerate a weak
economic recovery, failed to meet hugely elevated expectations for his
presidency and waged a political war of attrition with Republicans.
He begins anew with several fierce budget battles looming in
Congress, and his “Yes We Can” rhetoric soured by sarcasm over the
blocking tactics of Republicans in the partisan brouhaha paralyzing
government in Washington.
Abroad, the US confrontation with Iran is fast-headed to a critical
point with the specter of military action becoming ever more real the
longer diplomacy over Tehran’s nuclear program remains stuck in neutral.
And terror strikes that killed Americans in Benghazi and Algeria call
into question Obama’s election year sound bite that “Al-Qaeda is on the
run,” despite the killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in 2011.
Muscle-flexing by China and rising tensions in contested waters with
its neighbors, as well as North Korea’s nuclear belligerence, will
meanwhile test the president’s signature pivot of US diplomacy to Asia.
Obama was taking the oath of office on Sunday to comply with the US
Constitution, which dictates his first term ends at noon on January 20.
Tradition states that when that date falls on a Sunday, a private
swearing-in is followed on Monday by the public festivities, including
the second oath taking, the address, parade and glittering inaugural
balls.
Obama knows that for second term presidents, power quickly wanes and political potholes await.
The second term “curse” often strikes: Richard Nixon resigned, Bill
Clinton was impeached, George W. Bush’s image was shattered by Iraq and
Hurricane Katrina and Ronald Reagan’s legacy was marred by the
Iran-Contra scandal.
Plouffe said however that with a full agenda, including immigration
reform, gun control and speeding the economic recovery, Obama would
hardly be shuffling around the White House looking for things to
do.(AFP)
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