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Obama sworn in for 2nd term in White House ceremony

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President Barack Obama speaks during an inaugural reception at the National Building Museum on Sunday, January 20, 2013, in Washington, D.C. (Pool photo by Shawn Thew/EPA via Abaca Press/MCT)

(MCT) — WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama was officially sworn into office for a second term Sunday in a small ceremony at the White House as the nation’s capital geared up for a full inauguration on Monday.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. administered the oath to the 44th president, surrounded by only a few family members.

Obama will participate in the traditional — and much more flashy — inauguration ceremony on the steps of the U.S. Capitol Monday, following the lead of his predecessors whose first day in office, as prescribed by the Constitution, fell on a Sunday. Up to 800,000 are expected to attend Monday, though the festivities have been scaled back from four years ago when 1.8 million poured into the city to witness the swearing in of the nation’s first black president.

“Make sure you know that what we’re celebrating is not the election or swearing-in of a president,” Obama said in brief remarks late Sunday at a candlelight reception with high-dollar donors at the tony National Building Museum. The reception was one of several star-studded events at the 57th inauguration celebration that serve as a thank you for contributors helping to pick up the multi-million dollars tab of days of festivities.

“What we’re doing is celebrating each other, and celebrating this incredible nation that we call home,” Obama said.

“This was about us, who we are as a nation, what values we cherish, how hard we’re willing to fight to make sure that those values live not just for today but for future generations.”

Obama kicks off a second four-year term with ambitions to overhaul the nation’s tax code, rewrite immigration laws, tighten gun regulations and combat global warming.

But he faces a fractured political climate — in part fueled by a divided Congress and nation — as he combats an array of domestic and foreign-policy challenges and goals from boasting a still lagging economy to winding down the war in Afghanistan.

Vice President Joe Biden ticked off the president’s first-term accomplishments to applause from the reception crowd — health care reform, ending the war in Iraq, support for same-sex marriage.

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