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Obama takes ceremonial oath with more than 800,000 in attendence- tells nation 'our journey is not complete
President Barack Obama issued a call to unity in his second inaugural
address, urging the nation to move past the divisions that marked the
last four years in politics and complete the work of living up to
America's founding principles.
The president, in a speech that
blended together post-partisan rhetoric and policy declarations,
highlighted the progress made during his first term to end foreign wars
and turn around the economy.
But Obama said that there was much
unfinished work ahead, and he used Monday's speech to urge political
leaders to finally rise above bitter squabbling — a recurring theme of
his first term, and a mark of how difficult it has been for Obama to
live up to his 2008 vow to change Washington's business as usual.
"Our journey is not complete," Obama said during one refrain in his speech.
"We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle
for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate," Obama said. "We
must act, knowing that our work will be imperfect....full speech + pictures below
We must act,
knowing that today’s victories will be only partial, and that it will be
up to those who stand here in four years, and forty years, and four
hundred years hence to advance the timeless spirit once conferred to us
in a spare Philadelphia hall."
Obama and Vice President Joe Biden
were sworn in by Chief Justice John Roberts and Supreme Court Associate
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, respectively, shortly before noon; Monday's
oath of office was ceremonial, following their formal,
constitutionally-prescribed swearing-in on Sunday.
Monday's ceremonies coincided with the federal holiday honoring
Martin Luther King, Jr. Obama nodded to the slain civil rights leader
during his speech, and the nation's first African-American president
used one of King's Bibles during today's inauguration.
The
president's speech, though, strode between acknowledging the
accomplishments of his first term and the new priorities for his second.
The president begins his new term this week intent upon pursuing an
ambitious agenda following his decisive re-election victory last
November over Republican opponent Mitt Romney.
Rebuilding the economy, strengthening entitlement programs for future
generations and addressing the threat of climate change were among the
initiatives upon which the president touched during his speech. Obama
nodded toward other priorities, that were set to define his next four
years in office: equal rights for gay and lesbian Americans, immigration
reform that offers undocumented residents a pathway to citizenship and
new rules to curb gun violence.
But as political leaders from both
parties looked on from the inaugural platform, Obama avoided much of
the hard-charging rhetoric of last year's campaign.
Romney, the
erstwhile GOP nominee, spent Inauguration Day at his home in La Jolla,
Calif., and a former aide told NBC News it was unlikely that the former
Massachusetts governor would watch today's festivities.
Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, Romney's running mate last fall, said today was not a day to emphasize partisan divisions.
"But today, we put those disagreements aside," Ryan said in a statement. "Today, we remember what we share in common."
To
be sure, a variety of bruising political battles between Obama and
Congress — in particular, a House of Representatives controlled by
Republicans — loomed on the horizon. On Wednesday, Republicans said,
they would vote on a measure to extend the nation's debt limit by a few
months.
More pictures HERE
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