Obama’s train of hope closes in on destination

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Obama’s train of hope  closes in on destination
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Ocak 19, 2009 00:00

WASHINGTON - After riding a special inauguration train into Washington and carrying the hopes of a nation demoralized, Barack Obama was due to attend a concert in Washington as Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review went to press yesterday.

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Two new polls showed a burst of optimism among Americans that Obama could make good on his transition slogan and renew America's promise. "Let's make sure this election is not the end of what we do to change America, but the beginning," Obama said, as he trundled toward the U.S. capital and his place in history as the first black president.

Along a railroad from Philadelphia to Washington, a route once traced by his hero, former President Abraham Lincoln, Obama urged Americans to adopt a new "Declaration of Independence" from bigotry, small thinking and ideology.

And as the train rolled into Washington's Union station, a short stroll from where he will be sworn in tomorrow at the U.S. Capitol, a New York Times/CBS poll found 79 percent of Americans were optimistic about four years under Obama.

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After eight tumultuous years under President George W. Bush, 68 percent said Obama would be a good, or very good president, reflecting the soaring expectations and high stakes for his looming presidency.

Optimism

The findings were echoed by a Washington Post-ABC News survey. It showed that more than half of Americans had high hopes for his presidency, almost three-quarters said Obama's proposals would improve the economy, and about eight in 10 had a favorable view of him.

In Philadelphia, the cradle of U.S. independence, and again before a shivering 40,000-strong crowd in Baltimore, Obama told Americans to delve into history and draw strength from U.S. independence heroes at a time of rare national peril.

"Only a handful of times in our history has a generation been confronted with challenges so vast," said Obama, 47, highlighting the diving economy and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"And yet while our problems may be new, what is required to overcome them is not," he told around 300 supporters in a flag-draped station waiting room.

"What is required is a new declaration of independence, not just in our nation, but in our own lives Ğ from ideology and small thinking, prejudice and bigotry Ğ an appeal not to our easy instincts but to our better angels."

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Exuberant supporters gathered on embankments and at remote country stations to glimpse the ceremonial train, dubbed the Inaugural Express.

"Hallelujah, we did it!" read one poster held up by a supporter, while another supporter declared "Hail to the Chief" as the 10-car train did a "slow roll" through the Delaware town of Claymont.

Dyone Watson, 20, waited for hours among an estimated 40,000 others to see Obama in arctic Baltimore. "I'm starving, cold and my feet are numb," said Watson. "But it's definitely worth it," Watson added.

Will Moore, 22, said: "It's just beautiful. It just makes me want to do more with my life."

Security was overt. Police cars and officers along the train tracks patrolled crowds and areas of scrubby woodland Ğ a Chinook helicopter hovered protectively overhead while black-clad sharpshooters perched on city rooftops.

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Hundreds more lined Washington's Pennsylvania Avenue to watch Barack Obama's swift-moving motorcade whip past on his way to the presidential guest house at Blair House, opposite his new digs in the White House.

Earlier, Obama stepped off the train to pick up his vice president-to-be Joseph Biden, in his home patch of Wilmington, Delaware.

’Spring on the way’

"Sometimes it's hard to believe that we'll see the spring again, but I tell you, spring is on the way with this new administration," Biden said.

The Obama Express later rumbled into the gritty Maryland port city of Baltimore, where tens of thousands of people waited for hours in freezing temperatures and endured intense security precautions.

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The train arrived in Washington in the early evening at the end of the first of four days of inaugural celebrations.

The journey was the last stage of a quest for the presidency that took U.S. President-elect Obama from the declaration of his unlikely candidacy in the snows of early 2007 in Springfield, Illinois -- where, like Lincoln, he served as a state legislator -- across the length and breadth of the United States, and even to Europe and the Middle East.

Along the way he thwarted Democrat Hillary Clinton's bid to be the first woman president -- but offered her the consolation prize of secretary of state and dispensed with Republican John McCain in November's presidential election.

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