Barack Obama wins second term as US
President despite weak economy
US President Barack Obama rolled to
re-election Tuesday night, vanquishing former Massachusetts Governor Mitt
Romney despite a weak economy that plagued his first term and put a crimp in
the middle class dreams of millions. In victory, he confidently promised better
days ahead.
Obama spoke to thousands of cheering
supporters in his hometown of Chicago, praising Romney and declaring his
optimism for the next four years. "While our road has been hard, though
our journey has been long, we have picked ourselves up, we have fought our way
back and we know in our hearts that for the United States of America, the best
is yet to come," he said.
Romney made a brief, graceful concession
speech before a disappointed crowd in Boston. He summoned all Americans to pray
for Obama and urged the night's political winners to put partisan bickering
aside and "reach across the aisle" to tackle the nation's problems.
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The US President's laserlike focus on
the battleground states allowed him to win the 270 electoral votes needed to
win the White House.
Still, after the costliest - and one of
the nastiest - campaigns in history, divided government was alive and well.
Democrats retained control of the Senate with surprising ease. With three races
too close to call, they had the possibility of gaining a seat.
Republicans won the House, ensuring that
Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Obama's partner in unsuccessful deficit talks,
would reclaim his seat at the bargaining table. With numerous races as yet
uncalled, the size of the GOP majority was unknown.
At Obama headquarters in Chicago, a huge
crowd gathered waving small American flags and cheering. Supporters hugged each
other, danced and pumped their fists in the air. Excited crowds also gathered
in New York's Times Square, at Faneuil Hall in Boston and near the White House
in Washington, drivers joyfully honking as they passed by.
With returns from 88 per cent of the
nation's precincts, Obama had 55.8 million, 49.8 per cent of the popular vote.
Romney had 54.5 million, or 48.6 per cent.
The president's laserlike focus on the
battleground states allowed him to run up a 303-206 margin in the competition
for the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House, the count that
mattered most. Remarkably, given the sour economy, he lost only two states that
he captured in 2008, Indiana and North Carolina. Florida, another Obama state
four years ago, remained too close to call.
The election emerged as a choice between
two very different visions of government - whether it occupies a major,
front-row place in American lives or is in the background as a less-obtrusive
facilitator for private enterprise and entrepreneurship.
The economy was rated the top issue by
about 60 per cent of voters surveyed as they left their polling places. But
more said former President George W. Bush bore responsibility for current
circumstances than Obama did after nearly four years in office.
That boded well for the president, who
had worked to turn the election into a choice between his proposals and
Romney's, rather than a simple referendum on the economy during his time in the
White House.
Unemployment stood at 7.9 per cent on
Election Day, higher than when the president took office. And despite signs of
progress, the economy is still struggling after the worst recession in history.
Obama captured Ohio, Wisconsin, Iowa,
Virginia, New Hampshire, Colorado and Nevada, seven of the nine states where
the rivals and their allies poured nearly $1 billion into dueling television
commercials.
Romney won North Carolina among the
battleground states.
Florida was too close to call, Obama
leading narrowly in a state where there were still long lines of voters at some
polling places long after the appointed closing time.
Romney, who grew wealthy in business and
ran the 2002 Olympic Games in Salt Lake City before entering politics, spoke
only briefly to supporters, some of whom wept.
"I so wish that I had been able to
fulfill your hopes to lead the country in a different direction," he said.
"But the nation chose another leader and so Ann and I join with you to
earnestly pray for him and for this great nation."
Moments later, Obama stepped before a
far different crowd hundreds of miles away.
"Tonight you voted for action, not
politics as usual," he said. He pledged to work with leaders of both
parties to help the nation complete its recovery from the worst recession since
the Great Depression.
Boehner issued a statement of his own,
noting that while Obama won, so, too, did his House Republicans "If there
is a mandate, it is a mandate for both parties to find common ground and take
steps together to help our economy grow and create jobs, which is critical to
solving our debt," he said.
By any description, the list of
challenges is daunting - high unemployment, a slow-growth economy, soaring
deficits, a national debt at unsustainable. To say nothing of the threat of a
nuclear Iran and the menace of al-Qaida and other terrorist groups more than a
decade after the attacks of Sept., 11, 2001.
There was no doubt about what drove
voters to one candidate or the other in the presidential race.
About 4 in 10 said the economy is on the
mend, but more than that said it was stagnant or getting worse more than four
years after the near-collapse of 2008. The survey was conducted for The
Associated Press and a group of television networks.
In the battle for the Senate, Elizabeth
Warren turned Republican Scott Brown out of office in Massachusetts, and Rep.
Joe Donnelly captured a seat from GOP hands in Indiana.
Deb Fischer picked up a seat for
Republicans in Nebraska, defeating former Sen. Bob Kerrey.
In Maine, independent former Gov. Angus
King was elected to succeed retiring GOP Sen. Olympia Snowe. He has not yet
said which party he will side with, but Republicans attacked him in television
advertising during the race, and Democrats rushed to his cause.
In the presidential race, Obama won in
the reliably Democratic Northeast and on the West Coast. Pennsylvania was his,
too, despite two late campaign stops by Romney.
Romney won most of the South as well as
much of the Rocky Mountain West and Farm Belt.
The president was in Chicago as he
awaited the voters' verdict on his four years in office. He told reporters he
had a concession speech as well as victory remarks prepared. He congratulated
Romney on a spirited campaign. "I know his supporters are just as engaged,
just as enthusiastic and working just as hard today" as Obama's own, he
added.
Romney reciprocated, congratulating the
man who he had campaigned against for more than a year.
Earlier, he raced to Ohio and
Pennsylvania for Election Day campaigning and projected confidence as he flew
home to Massachusetts. "We fought to the very end, and I think that's why
we'll be successful," he said, adding that he had finished writing a
speech anticipating victory but nothing if the election went to his rival.
Like Obama, Vice President Joe Biden was
in Chicago as he waited to find out if he was in line for a second term.
Republican running mate Paul Ryan was with Romney in Boston, although he kept
one eye on his campaign for re-election to the House from Wisconsin, a race he
won.
The long campaign's cost soared into the
billions, much of it spent on negative ads, some harshly so.
In a months-long general election ad war
that cost nearly $1 billion, Romney and Republican groups spent more than $550
million and Obama and his allies $381 million, according to organizations that
track advertising.
According to the exit poll, 53 per cent
of voters said Obama was more in touch with people like them, compared to 43
per cent for Romney.
About 60 per cent said taxes should be
increased, taking sides on an issue that divided the president and Romney.
Obama wants to let taxes rise on upper incomes, while Romney does not.
Other than the battlegrounds, big states
were virtually ignored in the final months of the campaign. Romney wrote off
New York, Illinois and California, while Obama made no attempt to carry Texas,
much of the South or the Rocky Mountain region other than Colorado.
There were 33 Senate seats on the
ballot, 23 of them defended by Democrats and the rest by Republicans.
Democratic Rep. Chris Murphy, a
Democrat, won a Connecticut seat long held by Sen. Joe Lieberman, retiring
after a career that included a vice presidential spot on Al Gore's ticket in
2000. It was Republican Linda McMahon's second defeat in two tries, at a
personal cost of $92 million.
The GOP needed a gain of three for a
majority if Romney won, and four if Obama was re-elected. Neither Majority
Leader Harry Reid of Nevada nor GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky was on
the ballot, but each had high stakes in the outcome.
All 435 House seats were on the ballot,
including five where one lawmaker ran against another as a result of
once-a-decade redistricting to take population shifts into account. Democrats
needed to pick up 25 seats to gain the majority they lost two years ago.
House Speaker Boehner, R-Ohio, raised
millions to finance get-out-the-vote operations in states without a robust
presidential campaign, New York, Illinois and California among them. His goal
was to minimize any losses, or possibly even gain ground, no matter Romney's
fate. House Democratic leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California campaigned
aggressively, as well, and faced an uncertain political future after her party
failed to win control.
Democrats toppled conservative tea party
freshman Reps. Joe Walsh and Bobby Schilling in Illinois, as well as another
freshman, Robert Dold and seven-term veteran Judy Biggert, a social moderate.
Other GOP casualties included Rep. David
Rivera of Florida, who was hurt by investigations into his past campaign
financing; Ann Marie Buerkle of New York, who lost to the Democrat she defeated
in 2010, Dan Maffei, and New Hampshire Republican Charlie Bass, ousted by Ann
Kuster, the Democrat he defeated narrowly two years ago.
Republicans turned Rep. Kathy Hochul out
of office in New York, as well as Larry Kissel in North Carolina, Mark Critz in
Pennsylvania and Ben Chandler in Kentucky.
In gubernatorial races, Republicans
picked up North Carolina, where Pat McCrory won easily. The incumbent,
Democratic Gov. Bev Purdue, did not seek re-election.
In a campaign that traversed contested
Republican primaries last winter and spring, a pair of political conventions
this summer and three presidential debates, Obama, Romney, Biden and Ryan spoke
at hundreds of rallies, were serenaded by Bruce Springstein and Meat Loaf and
washed down hamburgers, pizza, barbecue and burrito bowls.
Obama was elected the first black
president in 2008, and four years later, Romney became the first Mormon to
appear on a general election ballot. Yet one man's race and the other's
religion were never major factors in this year's campaign for the White House,
a race dominated from the outset by the economy.
Over and over, Obama said that during
his term the nation had begun to recover from the worst recession since the
Great Depression. While he conceded progress had been slow, he accused Romney
of offering recycled Republican policies that have helped the wealthy and
harmed the middle class in the past and would do so again.
Romney countered that a second Obama
term could mean a repeat recession in a country where economic growth has been
weak and unemployment is worse now than when the president was inaugurated. A
wealthy former businessman, he claimed the knowledge and the skills to put in
place policies that would make the economy healthy again.
In a race where the two men disagreed
often, one of the principal fault lines was over taxes. Obama campaigned for
the renewal of income tax cuts set to expire on Dec. 31 at all income levels
except above $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples.
Romney said no one's taxes should go up
in uncertain economic times. In addition, he proposed a 20 per cent cut across
the board in income tax rates but said he would end or curtail a variety of tax
breaks to make sure federal deficits didn't rise.
The differences over taxes, the economy,
Medicare, abortion and more were expressed in intensely negative advertising.
Obama launched first, shortly after
Romney dispatched his Republican foes in his quest for the party nomination.
One memorable commercial showed Romney
singing an off-key rendition of "America The Beautiful." Pictures and
signs scrolled by saying that his companies had shipped jobs to Mexico and
China, that Massachusetts state jobs had gone to India while he was governor
and that he has personal investments in Switzerland, Bermuda and the Cayman
Islands.
Romney spent less on advertising than
Obama. A collection of outside groups made up the difference, some of them
operating under rules that allowed donors to remain anonymous. Most of the ads
were of the attack variety. But the Republican National Committee relied on one
that had a far softer touch, and seemed aimed at voters who had been drawn to
the excitement caused by Obama's first campaign. It referred to a growing
national debt and unemployment, then said, "He tried. You tried. It's OK
to make a change."
More than 30 million voters cast early
ballots in nearly three dozen states, a reflection of the growing appeal of
getting a jump on the traditional Election Day.
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