Pres. Obama Takes Oath For Second Term

Posted on: 2:34 pm, January 20, 2013, by

Pres. Obama Oath

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The official business of the 57th inauguration commenced on Sunday with President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden completing their oaths of office, quietly satisfying the constitutional obligation to be sworn in on January 20.

The presidential and vice presidential swearings-in took place a day before Obama and Biden take their public oaths at the Capitol in front of hundreds of thousands gathered on the National Mall.

Obama’s swearing-in took place in the ornate Blue Room, an oval-shaped reception space in the president’s official residence, where the president was joined by his wife, Michelle, and his two daughters. Other members of his family, including the first lady’s mother and brother, stood out of view of the camera.

Chief Justice John Roberts administered the oath to Obama – his third time to hold that honor. After Roberts flubbed the order of words during the public ceremony in 2009, a do-over took place in the White House Map Room the next day to erase any question that Obama was officially the president.

Roberts didn’t have any trouble with the 35-word oath this time around. He read from a white note card with the words printed on it. Slash marks where Roberts paused to have Obama repeat the words were clearly visible.

The event took less than a minute and Obama didn’t make any remarks or statements.

He did take a moment to hug his wife and daughters, exclaiming: “I did it!”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor performed the honors for Biden at his home at the Naval Observatory in Washington, where he was sworn in under a painting by American artist N.C. Wyeth of Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural – an event remembered for the 16th president’s solemn address.

That was hardly the mood Sunday at Biden’s home, where the vice president’s extended family and a few Cabinet officials gathered to watch the ceremony.

His son Beau – Delaware’s attorney general – was there, as were his other children, Hunter and Ashley, and a smattering of Biden grandchildren.

He placed his hand on a massive Biden family Bible, held by his wife Jill, and repeated the oath.

Both Obama and Biden traveled to Arlington National Cemetery after Biden’s swearing-in for a traditional wreath-laying ceremony.

And the president and his family attended services celebrating the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. at Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church, one of the most historic churches in Washington.

The tone of Obama’s inaugural address Monday will be “hopeful,” White House senior adviser David Plouffe said Sunday.

“What he’s going to do is remind the country that our founding principles and values still can guide us in a changing and modern world,” Plouffe said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“He’s going to talk about the fact that our political system doesn’t require us to resolve all of our disputes or settle all of our differences but it doesn’t compel us to act where there shouldn’t and is common ground,” Plouffe added. “He’s going to make that point very clearly.”

Plouffe underscored that Obama’s State of the Union address, to take place February 12, will present a more specific “blueprint” of the next four years.

The nation’s first African-American president will become only the 17th U.S. leader to deliver a second inaugural address, before he joins the traditional parade up Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House.

Organizers expect 800,000 people to attend Monday’s public ceremony — less than half of the estimated 1.8 million onlookers who crammed the National Mall in 2009.

The smaller crowd this time around reflects the reality of second-term presidencies, when the novelty and expectations of a new leader have been replaced with the familiarity and experiences of the first four years.

Sunday evening, the Obamas will watch Latino acts at “In Performance at the Kennedy Center,” which is followed by the Let Freedom Ring concert. The Red, White and Blue Inaugural Ball and Hip-Hop Inaugural Ball are also scheduled in the capital.

The president will speak to donors at a candlelight celebration at the National Building Museum on Sunday night.

Monday’s events will be downsized from Obama’s first inauguration. After events in front of the Capitol, the Obamas and Bidens will lead the traditional parade down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House. There are only two presidential balls this year, down from the 10 staged in 2009.

While the anticipated crowd for Monday’s events is expected to be about half the size of the one that gathered four years ago, the temperature will be a bit higher than in 2009, when the high hovered around the freezing mark. While the early morning temperature this time will be in the 20s, the forecast calls for a high temperature in the upper 30s or low 40s. Still, organizers cautioned attendees to bundle up because they’re likely to experience prolonged exposure to the cold as they watch the events and make their way to and from them.

™ & © 2013 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
Filed in:
News