CHICAGO:
US President Barack Obama returned to Washington on Wednesday
emboldened by his re-election but facing the daunting task of breaking
down partisan gridlock in a bitterly divided Congress.
Obama
told Americans “the best is yet to come” after defying dark economic
omens to handily defeat Mitt Romney, but his in-tray is already
overflowing with unfulfilled first term wishes thwarted by blanket
Republican opposition.
Whether on immigration reform,
health care or a grand plan to rein in the ballooning budget deficit,
the president struggled for four years to find compromise in Congress
and some questioned if he had the political chops.
The big
question at the start of Obama’s second term is this: will the
Republicans blink on the looming “fiscal cliff” and strike a deal that
will avert a catastrophic economic crunch forced by mandatory budget
cuts.
“In the weeks ahead, I also look forward to sitting
down with Governor Romney to talk about where we can work together to
move this country forward,” the president told the country in his
rousing acceptance speech.
But Obama knows it is not his
vanquished foe that he must now deal with but rather the Republican
leadership in Congress, which may dig its heels in after failing in its
stated goal: to make him a one-term president.
Obama, who
returns to Washington from Chicago later Wednesday, won despite the
highest unemployment rate of any president since Franklin Roosevelt in
1936 and became only the second Democrat since then to win a second
term.
With only Florida among the battleground states
still to be declared, Obama had 303 electoral votes — well over the 270
needed to win the White House.
Despite his resounding
Electoral College victory, diehard Republicans was already challenging
his mandate, pointing to his slim lead in the national popular vote
where he led Romney by 50 percent to 49 percent.
“I think
the real story here is that Obama won, but he’s got no mandate,” leading
conservative commentator Charles Krauthammer declared on Fox News.
“The
Republicans are in control of the House, probably a little bit
stronger. They are not going to budge. There’s no way after holding out
on Obama for two years they’re going to cave in, and Obama doesn’t have
anywhere really to go.”
Republican House of
Representatives Speaker John Boehner drew a line in the sand on Tuesday
night even before Obama’s win was sealed.
“The American
people want solutions — and tonight they’ve responded by renewing our
House Republican majority,” Boehner said. “With this vote, the American
people have also made clear that there is no mandate for raising tax
rates.”
But Boehner did schedule a statement for Wednesday
afternoon on the “fiscal cliff” acknowledging “the need for both
parties to find common ground.”
As Obama’s victory was
confirmed with wins in rustbelt Ohio and his spiritual political home in
Iowa, large crowds suddenly materialized outside the White House,
chanting “four more years” and “O-bama, O-bama.”
Republican
nominee Romney, 65, deflated and exhausted, offered a classy tribute,
as he consoled dejected supporters in Boston moments after phoning Obama
to formally concede.
“This is a time of great challenges
for America and I pray that the president will be successful in guiding
our nation,” Romney said.
Obama’s victory means he will
get the chance to embed his healthcare and Wall Street reforms deep into
the fabric of American life. Romney had pledged one of his first acts
would be to repeal Obamacare.
The president may also get
the chance to reshape the Supreme Court in his liberal image for a
generation, a move that would shape policy on issues like abortion and
gay rights.
The president will also look abroad as he
builds his legacy, and will face an immediate challenge early in 2013
over whether to use military force to thwart Iran’s nuclear programme.
Obama
ran for re-election on a platform of offering a “fair shot” to the
middle class, of fulfilling his pledge to end the war in Iraq, killing
Osama bin Laden, and starting to build a clean energy economy. World
leaders hailed Obama’s re-election, with allies pledging to deepen
cooperation with the United States on fighting the world economic slump
and maintaining security across the globe.
Congratulations
poured in from across the world, including fellow UN Security Council
members Britain, China, France and Russia as well as its staunch Middle
East ally Israel and Obama’s ancestral home in Kenya.
A
Myanmar government official announced that Obama would visit the former
pariah state on November 19 in what could be his first foreign trip
since re-election.
But once the president returns to focus
on domestic issues and the euphoria of his landmark re-election fades,
he will have to get on with the tough task of enacting his second term
agenda.
Democrats kept the Senate but fell short of the 60-vote super majority needed to sidestep Republican blocking tactics.
The
“fiscal cliff” — a combination of dramatic spending cuts and tax
increases — is set to take effect January 1 if US lawmakers cannot cut a
deal on the deficit by the end of the year.
Obama won
with a fiercely negative campaign branding Romney — a multi-millionaire
former corporate turnaround wizard — as indifferent to the woes of the
middle class.
Exit polls showed that though only 39
percent of people believed that the economy was improving, around half
of Americans blamed former Republican president George W. Bush for the
tenuous situation, and not Obama.
Remarkably, Obama’s
coalition of Hispanic, black, and young voters turned out in similar
numbers to those of his heady change-fueled campaign in 2008, shocking
Romney’s team and presenting a new American face to the world.
The
president was helped in particular by Latino voters, whose strong
support was crucial in the western desert state of Nevada and the Rocky
Mountain state of Colorado.
He may also have been aided at
the 11’th hour when superstorm Sandy roared ashore, killing more than
100 Americans but giving Obama the chance to project leadership at the
head of a multi-state disaster response.
01:38
Unknown
Posted in: 

0 comments:
Post a Comment