Posts Tagged ‘Inauguration’

January 15, 2013: Ottawa

Wednesday, January 16th, 2013

On Monday, January 21, Barack Obama and Joe Biden will be sworn in as President and Vice President of the United States. (The official swearing in will take place on the 20th as required by the Constitution. However, since it is a Sunday, the public event will take place on Monday.) The day will involve a ceremony on the steps of the Capitol, a luncheon in the Capital, a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue, and, of course, the Inaugural Balls.

But there is another important part of the Inauguration celebration. One that says so much about our President and about our country. As he did in 2009, President Obama has declared Saturday, January 19 as a National Day of Service. Millions of Americans across the country will volunteer in their communities to do something tangible to make our country a little bit better.

Members of our Embassy community here in Ottawa and in the seven Consulates across Canada want to do our part as well. So we are volunteering in our communities here in Canada. Volunteers from the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa will be sorting food and making packages at the Ottawa Food Bank. Volunteers from Consulate General Vancouver will do likewise for the Vancouver Food Bank. Consulate General Toronto is organizing a blood donation drive. Our Consul General’s family in Québec City has been serving meals to the homeless and helping the Québec City Women’s Club raise funds for scholarships for women returning to university. Consulate General Montreal will devote time to help the Omega Community Resources Agency, a local mental health center. Consulate General Halifax is collecting books for a Nova Scotia library that was broken into and had their new book fund stolen.

I encourage all American citizens living in Canada (there are more than a million of us) – and any of our Canadian friends who want to join us – to volunteer in your communities. Find an organization that needs help. Visit a lonely neighbor. Shovel the sidewalk of a senior citizen who has trouble doing it on his or her own. Do something to make your community just a little bit better.

I can’t think of a better way to celebrate the peaceful passage of power in the United States of America.

DJ

January 20, 2010 — Yes We Can

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

One year ago I was standing in the freezing cold – even by Canadian standards — in front of the Capitol with 2 million others to watch Barack Obama take the oath as proscribed by the Constitution to “faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and … to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” Then he added four words which are not found in the Constitution but which have been repeated by every President since George Washington. “So help me God.” It is an oath to an ideal – to an experiment – to the Constitution.

He stood before the American people and the world at a moment of grave crisis. Two wars. An economy in crisis. He reminded us that the journey ahead in support of that ideal would be long and hard. He concluded with a challenge: “Let it be said by our children’s children that when we were tested we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back nor did we falter; and with eyes fixed on the horizon and God’s grace upon us, we carried forth that great gift of freedom and delivered it safely to future generations.”

During the last 12 months that journey has indeed been long and hard. The President had promised during the campaign that the change we seek would not come easy. He was right. But that change has begun.

On his first day in the White House, the President signed the most sweeping ethics policy in history. Thousands of senior members of the new administration – including me – are prohibited from taking anything of value from a lobbyist and after leaving office, are prohibited from ever lobbying the Obama Administration for (hopefully) eight years.

Eight days after arriving at the White House, the President signed his first piece of legislation, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act ending pay discrimination against women. Two weeks later he signed the stimulus bill which – in the view of most economists – has significantly ameliorated the recession – though we still have a ways to go. And, the President also signed legislation extending health care for low income children.

During the past year, he changed the way we look at politics in the United States. He reaffirmed our commitment to those values that make us great. He reaffirmed that America is willing and able to lead the world against those evils that threaten us all. He reaffirmed that, as we fight for justice, we will seek the support, aid, and counsel of our closest allies. And, he reaffirmed that our experiment with democracy has succeeded.

DJ