2nd term: Obama vows to renew 'strong alliances' around world
feature, Headlines 03:47
Washington, January 21, 2013: President Barack Obama swore to protect and defend the U.S. Constitution in a massive public celebration of American democracy on Monday, marking the second inauguration of the country’s first African-American president.
Trumpets blew fanfare, cannons fired and hundreds of thousands of people outside the Capitol watched the president take the oath of office as the world’s most powerful elected leader.
Obama then began an inaugural address that touched on the broad gifts that bring the country together, and pointed to the work ahead, “the realities of our time.”
While he was officially sworn in on Sunday, as required by law, the glitter of Inauguration Day the parade down Pennsylvania Avenue toward the White House, the night of balls, the ceremonial beginning of a new four-year presidential term still enlivened staid Washington.
The celebration was pushed to Monday because 20th January fell on a Sunday this year. That placed the grand ceremony on the U.S. holiday marking the birthday of revered civil rights leader Martin Luther King.
Obama, the politician who rose improbably from a history as a community organiser in Chicago and a professor of constitutional law to the pinnacle of power, faces a nation riven by partisan disunity, a still-weak economy and an array of challenges abroad.
The President also faces a less charmed standing on the world stage, where expectations for him had been so high four years ago that he was given the Nobel Peace Prize just months into his presidency.
“Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world’s attention and given its people hope for a better future,” the Nobel announcement in 2009 read.
The President, First Lady Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia began the day at St. John’s Episcopal church, which was built in 1812 and is known as the church of presidents.
Obama later had coffee at the White House with congressional leaders, who play major roles in how the country is governed.
Monday’s events had less of the effervescence of four years ago, when the 1.8 million people packed into central Washington knew they were witnessing history.
Obama is now older, grayer and more entrenched in the politics he once tried rise above. Officials said crowds were about half what they were four years ago.
As he enters his second term, Americans increasingly see Obama as a strong leader, someone who stands up for his beliefs and is able to get things done, according to a survey by the Pew Research Centre for the People & the Press.
The survey shows him with a 52 per cent job approval rating, among the highest rankings since early in his presidency.
His personal favorability, 59 percent, has rebounded from a low of 50 percent in the 2012 campaign against Republican Mitt Romney.
When the partying is done on Monday, it’s back to business for a president who is leading a nation that is, perhaps, as divided as at any time since the Civil War 150 years ago. That conflict put down a rebellion by southern states and ended slavery.
In light of the nation’s troubled racial history, Obama’s election to the White House in 2008 as the first African-American president was seen by many as a turning point.
In his first inaugural address, Obama vowed to moderate the partisan anger engulfing the country, but the nation is only more divided four years on.
While Obama convincingly won a second term, the jubilation that surrounded him four years ago is subdued this time around a reality for second-term presidents.
He guided the country through many crushing challenges after taking office in 2009 — ending the Iraq war, putting the Afghan war on a course toward U.S. withdrawal and saving the collapsing economy.
He won approval for a sweeping health care overhaul.