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Countdown to Obama presidency as King remembered

ON the eve of his historic inauguration, Barack Obama joined yesterday in honoring slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King, underscoring racial barriers the Illinois Democrat overcame to be elected the first black US president.

Taking time away from preparing for an address he will deliver when he is sworn in today, Obama visited wounded troops at a military hospital and issued a call to Americans to remember King by recommitting themselves to public service.

Hundreds of thousands of visitors streamed into Washington for inaugural festivities but the celebration was tempered by the daunting challenges Obama will face -- unfinished wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Obama's inauguration, coming back-to-back with yesterday's federal holiday honoring King, has added to the deep symbolism of an African-American receiving the keys to the White House, which was built partly with the labor of black slaves.

"Tomorrow, we will come together as one people on the same mall where Dr. King's dream echoes still. As we do, we recognize that here in America, our destinies are inextricably linked. We resolve that as we walk, we must walk together."

In crafting one of the most eagerly awaited inaugural addresses ever, Obama will try to reassure recession-weary Americans they can rebound from hard times, and he will signal to the world his desire to fix a battered US image overseas.

But Obama, elected on a promise of change after eight years under Republican President George W. Bush, will also be mindful that if he sets expectations too high, he could risk disappointment.

IDLE HANDS NOT AN OPTION

Obama has vowed to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to jolt the economy out of the doldrums, and has said he wants to bring US combat forces out of Iraq within 16 months.

After rolling up his sleeves to help paint a wall at a shelter for homeless and runaway teenagers, Obama touched on a theme of personal responsibility expected to figure prominently in Tuesday's speech from the US Capitol steps.

In the evening, Obama sought to encourage a spirit of unity by having dinner with the man he defeated for the presidency, Republican Sen. John McCain. Obama said they would not always agree on everything in the months ahead.

"John is not known to bite his tongue, and if I'm screwing up, he's going to let me know. And that's how it should be," Obama said, adding -- to applause -- that the presidency was just one branch of the US government. The two stood on stage together at a downtown hotel.

Obama's relatively smooth transition to power suffered a hiccup when Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn said he may hold up Hillary Clinton's nomination to become secretary of state if his concerns about foreign donations to former President Bill Clinton's foundation are not resolved.

In addition, Vice President-elect Joe Biden's wife, Jill, suggested on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" that her husband had been offered two plum jobs, vice president or secretary of state, and that she had encouraged him to take the vice presidency because it would involve less travel.

Biden's spokeswoman, Elizabeth Alexander, later issued a statement saying Obama had offered Biden only the vice presidency.

The inauguration of Obama, son of a black father from Kenya and a white mother from Kansas, will mark a milestone in America's turbulent history of race relations.

It will come more than four decades after the height of the civil rights movement led by King, who preached racial harmony and was assassinated in 1968 by a white supremacist.

KING'S LEGACY OFTEN EVOKED

Obama often invoked King's legacy during his rise from unlikely candidate to his election in November as the country's 44th president.

But Obama also sought during much of the campaign to avoid calling direct attention to race, which remains divisive in US society.

A record crowd is expected for his inauguration, with a million people likely to fill the National Mall, a vast green surrounded by museums and monuments, and thousands more lined up along a parade route to the White House.

An unprecedented security operation was already under way, including patrols on ground, air and water.

Parties, concerts and seminars marking Obama's inauguration were launched over the weekend and will hit full stride after Tuesday's ceremony.

Outside the White House, an activist coalition calling itself "Arrest Bush" piled a motley collection of dozens of old shoes -- including tan combat boots said to have been worn by US troops in Iraq and children's yellow flip-flops.

"We wanted to shoo and boo Bush on his last day in office," said Ann Wilcox of Washington, D.C., who marched with the group of about 500 peace activists.

Bush leaves office with some of the lowest approval ratings of any modern president and with some historians already saying his tenure will rank among the worst ever.

Unlike some predecessors, Bush was tight-fisted with last-minute presidential pardons. He opted only to commute the sentences of two Border Patrol agents convicted for shooting an unarmed Mexican drug smuggler in the buttocks. The case drew an outcry from supporters who said the men were doing their jobs.

Bush's final official act will be to welcome Obama to the White House before the swearing-in and accompany him there by motorcade to attend the ceremony before flying home to Texas.

With Obama's approval, the Bush White House picked Defense Secretary Robert Gates to assure a continuity of government in case of an emergency on Inauguration Day. Gates was to stay in an undisclosed location outside Washington.



 

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