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U.S. President-elect Barack Obama and his wife Michelle are pictured en route Claymont, Deleware January 17, 2009, on his whistle stop train trip to Washington - Source: Reuters -
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Barack Obama warned Americans on Saturday of the vast challenges
ahead as he rolled by train into Washington, kicking off three days
of celebration of his inauguration as the 44th president of the
United States.
Obama waved to crowds from the back of a vintage train car and
stopped twice for rallies in frigid weather on the more than 7-hour
journey from Philadelphia to Washington, where he takes office on
Tuesday amid the deepest economic crisis in generations and wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Only a handful of times in our history has a generation been
confronted with challenges so vast," Obama said as he began the
trip in Philadelphia, evoking the patriots who launched the
American fight for independence in the city in 1776.
"While our problems may be new, what is required to overcome them
is not," Obama said. "What is required is the same perseverance and
idealism that our founders displayed."
He stressed in Philadelphia and at later stops in Wilmington,
Delaware, where he was joined by Vice President-elect Joe Biden,
and Baltimore that it would take time and sacrifice to turn the
economy around.
"Such enormous challenges will not be solved quickly. There will be
false starts and setbacks, frustrations and disappointments," Obama
told about 40,000 cheering supporters in Baltimore.
"We will be called to show patience even as we act with fierce
urgency," he said.
Obama, a Democrat who will become the first black US president, has
vowed to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to jolt the country
out of a deepening recession.
"America faces its own crossroads - a nation at war, an economy in
turmoil, an American Dream that feels like its slipping away,"
Obama said in Wilmington.
The 137-mile (220-km) train journey launched three days of parties,
concerts and shows to celebrate Obama's swearing-in at the US
Capitol on Tuesday afternoon.
The carefully staged trip was designed to recall the 1861 rail
journey to the capital by Abraham Lincoln before he entered the
White House. Obama frequently evokes Lincoln, a fellow resident of
Illinois, who led the United States during the Civil War and ended
slavery in America.
Janice Winston, 56, one of about 250 invited guests who watched
Obama leave Philadelphia's 30th Street train station, said she was
thrilled to see a black man assume the presidency.
'A new day'
"It's finally hitting me, because I'm starting to cry, that this is
really happening," said Winston, who is black. "Today is a new
day."
Obama's train slowed to a crawl at a few spots along the route so
he could step out onto the back of his carriage and wave to the
crowds that lined the tracks.
In Claymont, Delaware, several hundred people gathered to cheer and
wave to Obama, holding signs reading "Halleluja, We Did It," and
"Hail to the chief." In Edgewood, Maryland, the waiting crowd
chanted "Obama" as the train rolled by.
Obama was joined on the train trip by about 40 invited "everyday
Americans." He and Biden, along with their wives, visited them
during the trip.
"This is more than an ordinary train ride, this is a new
beginning," Biden told the crowd in his hometown of
Wilmington.
Obama's swearing-in will cap a relatively smooth transition marred
by a few missteps, including the revelation his choice for treasury
secretary, New York Federal Reserve Bank President Timothy
Geithner, failed to pay thousands of dollars in taxes.
Despite the mistake, Geithner is expected to be confirmed by the
Senate and lead the administration's drive to cure the ailing
economy, which continues to be bombarded by dismal news in the
worst recession in decades.
At each stop of the train journey, Obama emphasized the need to
band together to tackle America's problems and rise above "ideology
and small thinking, prejudice and bigotry."
A new New York Times/CBS News poll showed Americans were confident
Obama could turn the economy around and prepared to give him years
to deal with the crush of problems he faces.
Majorities of Americans said they did not expect real progress on
the economy, healthcare improvements or ending the war in Iraq for
at least two years, the poll found.
His incoming White House chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, told a
conference of mayors in Washington the new administration was
focused on making the U.S. economy more competitive.
"We have got to invest in things that work in a different way,"
Emanuel said.
The priorities, he said, included investing in energy independence,
modernizing healthcare and expanding coverage, delivering universal
broadband Internet for a digitized economy and upgrading schools -
all of which will add to the already staggering price tag facing
the Obama administration.
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