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Unencumbered Obama enjoys a week that changes America

Published: 27 Jun 2015 - 12:35 pm | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 12:24 pm


Washington--Barack Obama came to office vowing to bring "change" to America, and after years stymied by partisan battles, a momentous week has left him emboldened and with a stronger claim to have fulfilled that promise.

On Friday morning Obama sat in the residence of the White House, preparing a eulogy for another victim of another mass shooting in America.

For six years Obama had used successive tragedies to cajole and coerce Congress into tightening gun laws, for six years he had failed.

Now he would be paying homage to Clementa Pinckney, a slain South Carolina preacher he had known since 2007.

In the immediate aftermath of the Charleston shooting, Obama seemed almost resigned to limitations of his quickly fading presidency.

America would get to grips with the problem "at some point," he said.

It was a far cry from his first term invocations of the "fierce urgency of now."

America's first black President is fond of repeating another dictum borrowed from Martin Luther King Jr., that "the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice."

The phrase is woven into a rug that encircles Obama's desk in the Oval Office.

The murder of nine African Americans including Pinckney -- by a suspected racist 21-year-old white man from the deep south -- showed just how long that arc can be.

As Obama wrote, the phone rang.

His senior advisor and long-time friend from Chicago, Valerie Jarrett, informed him that US Supreme Court had made gay marriage legal across the United States.

It was a decision that crowned a momentous week in American history and in Obama's presidency.

In just a few short days, Obama had won a major trade battle with Congress and the Supreme Court had upheld housing rights and swept aside the last major threat to his signature domestic policy achievement -- expanding health care to millions more Americans.

"Obamacare" was here to stay and now gay marriage had been enshrined in law -- something unthinkable just a few short years ago.

"Progress" he said shortly after in the White House Rose Garden surrounded by euphoric West Wing staff, "often comes in small increments, sometimes two steps forward, one step back."

"And then sometimes, there are days like this when that slow, steady effort is rewarded with justice that arrives like a thunderbolt."

Years defined by biting Fox News criticism, the ultra-conservative Tea Party and Congressional gridlock, suddenly seemed to have been swept aside.

AFP