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Home » » Inauguration Day: Obama set for public swearing-in

Inauguration Day: Obama set for public swearing-in

Written By Gimasa Ruyembe on Monday, January 21, 2013 | 6:05 PM


The West Front of the US Capitol is dressed in red, white and blue the day before President Obama's public inauguration ceremony, in Washington, 20 January 2013  

Crowds will gather on Washington's Mall to see President Obama swo 

Obama Inauguration


Crowds are thronging the US Capitol to watch Barack Obama be publicly sworn in for his second term as US president.
Mr Obama will take the oath of office before hundreds of thousands of spectators on Washington's National Mall.
Festivities include black-tie balls, a parade, and musical performances.
Mr Obama was formally sworn in at a small White House ceremony on Sunday - the US Constitution dictates presidential terms begin on 20 January.
In the famous Blue Room with his wife and daughters, the Democratic president rested his hand on a Bible that was used for many years by Michelle Obama's family, and was sworn in by Chief Justice John Roberts.
Inauguration Day schedule 1130 : Official ceremony begins at the West Front of US Capitol
1155 : Obama is publicly sworn in as president by Chief Justice John Roberts
1200 : Obama delivers inaugural address
1239 : Obama signs nomination papers for his Cabinet
1300 : Inaugural lunch in Statuary Hall at the US Capitol
1436 : Inaugural parade on Pennsylvania Avenue, ending at the White House.

All time Eastern Standard Time, five hours behind GMT.
According to the words prescribed by the US constitution, Mr Obama swore he would "faithfully execute the office of president of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States".
He will repeat those words at Monday's public inauguration, placing his left hand on Bibles owned by legendary American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr and President Abraham Lincoln.
Then, Mr Obama will give an inaugural address in which he will lay out his vision for a second term.
Mr Obama is not expected to preview his policy agenda on Monday - he will address that in next month's State of the Union speech, when he will ask bitterly divided lawmakers to come together and reduce gun violence, overhaul the immigration system and reduce the yawning federal budget deficit.
Speaking at a reception for supporters late on Sunday, Mr Obama suggested he would dwell on the "common good" and the "goodness, the resilience, neighbourliness, the patriotism" of Americans.
"What we are celebrating is not the election or the swearing-in of the president," Mr Obama said. "What we are doing is celebrating each other and celebrating this incredible nation that we call home."
By Monday afternoon, Mr Obama will have taken the oath four times - as many as President Franklin D Roosevelt.
Four years ago, Mr Obama repeated the oath privately to make sure all constitutional obligations were met after Justice Roberts tripped over the words in the public ceremony.
Mr Obama took his official oath on Sunday in the White House's Blue Room
Following Monday's ceremony, Mr Obama will have the traditional lunch with US lawmakers in the capitol building's Statuary Hall.
Later, the president is expected to walk at least part of the parade route down Pennsylvania Avenue toward the White House.
Vice-President Joe Biden, who was also sworn in on Sunday - by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor - will repeat his oath publicly as well.
In the evening, the Obamas will don formal evening attire for several lavish inaugural balls in Washington.
The zone surrounding the National Mall in the US capital is in virtual lockdown, with movement of people and vehicles tightly restricted.
White tents, trailers and generators are set up along the parade route, while nearby buildings have been adorned with red, white and blue bunting.
Officials estimate about 700,000 people will attend the inauguration, down significantly from 2009, when about 1.8 million people witnessed Mr Obama be sworn in as America's first black president.
"We wanted to see history, I think, and also for the children to witness that anything is possible through hard work," David Richardson of Atlanta, in the crowd with his two young children, told the Associated Press.

 
Map of inauguration route
Will you be attending the inauguration ceremony? Will you be watching wherever you are? If so, we would like to hear from you. You can send us your pictures and stories using the form below.
                                                  
                                                       Source: TVNEWSER
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