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Obama summons nation for 2nd term: ‘We are made for this moment’

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Monday’s events were jubilant, though they didn’t have the same level of excitement as four years ago when a young senator promising hope and change became the nation’s first black president. There were no official estimates of the audience Monday. Inaugural organizers said they believed 1 million attended, though they did not explain their estimate. Regardless, it was far short of the 1.8 million who attended in 2009 while still an above-average audience for a second-term inauguration.

“Last time there was a little bit more excitement. It was brand-new,” Kerry Kelty of Pittsburgh said of Obama’s first inauguration. “I don’t think people are disappointed, but reality hit.”

The crowds led to a maze of street closures, clogged subways, heightened security and the National Mall filled with 1,500 portable toilets, five large-screen TVs and 6,000 members of the National Guard in town assisting with crowd control.

After a bitter election and constant clashes on Capitol Hill, Obama used his inaugural address to encourage those with differing views to work together to accomplish something, even if it’s not everything.

“For now decisions are upon us, and we cannot afford delay,” he said. “We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate,” the president said. “We must act; we must act knowing that our work will be imperfect.”

In his second term, Obama faces a polarized political climate. He must address fiscal issues — tax revisions and spending cuts — and pressing international obligations: stopping Iran’s nuclear program, navigating an end to the war in Afghanistan and avoiding tensions with China over the administration’s “pivot” to Asia. In the weeks since he defeated Republican Mitt Romney, he’s already battled with Republicans in Congress over tax increases and spending reductions.

Outlining the nation he envisions, he sounded the themes of his recent campaign as a call for using the federal government to shift the benefits of the country and its economy to the poor and middle class and away from the wealthy.

“We, the people, understand that our country cannot succeed when a shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it,” he said. “We believe that America’s prosperity must rest upon the broad shoulders of a rising middle class.”

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