'They're starting to seriously worry': Concern growing about low turnout at Obama inauguration
- Hotel rooms remain unbooked ahead of January 21 inauguration ceremony
- Organizers expecting much lower turnout than 2009 ceremony, when nearly 2 million people flocked to the National Mall
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Crowds may have flocked to the National Mall to see President Obama make history in 2009, but the team behind the president's 2013 inauguration bash later this month are bracing themselves for a ton of empty seats.
The ceremony that Washington will stage in a few weeks won't be the historic affair it was in 2009, when nearly 2 million people flocked to the Capitol o watch Obama take the oath of office.
This time, District of Columbia officials expect between 600,000 and 800,000 people for Obama's public swearing-in on the steps of the Capitol on Monday, January 21.
Staging area: D.C. officials are expecting
between 600,000 and 800,000 people for Obama's public swearing-in on the
steps of the Capitol on Monday, January 21
There will be just two official inaugural balls this year, both at the Washington Convention Center, rather than 10 official balls at multiple locations around town.
The pair of celebrations are the lowest number since 1953, according to the New York Post.
A political insider told the paper: 'Some on the presidential inaugural committee are starting to seriously worry.'
His inaugural committee has also scaled the celebration back to three days of festivities, instead of four.
Some changes are on account of the slowly recovering economy and a desire by planners to ease the security burden on law enforcement.
Swearing in: First Lady Michelle Obama holds the Bible as President Obama takes the oath of office in this 2009 photo
Turnout: The 2012 inauguration is not expected to draw the same crowd that flocked to the event in 2009, pictured
'There certainly will not be the sort of exultation you saw four years ago,' said Mike Cornfield, a George Washington University political science professor.
One reason why, Cornfield said, is it simply lacks the dramatic transfer of power from one president to the next.
Sealed with a kiss: President Obama kisses his
wife Michelle after he is sworn in as the 44th president of the United
States during the 2009 ceremony
Even Obama acknowledges he's already, shall we say, a little washed-up the second time around.
'I think that a lot of folks feel that, "Well, he's now president. He's a little grayer. He's a little older. It's not quite as new as it was,"' the president often told supporters while campaigning for re-election.
There will be a parade, but it's expected to be smaller too; about 130 groups and 15,000 people marched down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House in 2009.
Obama will be sworn in first on January 20, the date set by the Constitution, but it will be done in private since the day falls on a Sunday.
His public swearing-in the next day also falls on the federal holiday honoring civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., branding the occasion with another layer of historical significance, especially for African-Americans.
Lessened interest in the second inauguration of a two-term president such as Obama could be a natural function of America's political process, said Daniel Klinghard, associate professor of political science at the College of the Holy Cross.
'When it's your first [inauguration], you're new and people are only seeing the potential in you,' Klinghard said. 'By the time the second one rolls around they're used to your voice, they're used to you saying certain kinds of things.'
One group for whom the Obama thrill remains strong is African-Americans, who overwhelmingly wanted him to have four more years in the White House.
More than nine in 10 blacks voted to re-elect Obama, according to surveys of voters as they left their polling places in November.
Victory: Obama, pictured with the first family
on Election night, will be inaugurated for his second term privately on
January 20, with a public ceremony to follow the next day
Chapters from Richmond, Virginia, and Jackson, Mississippi, among others, are bringing groups to Washington for the festivities, he said.
'There's still a great deal of excitement within the African-American community about the second term of the first African-American president of the United States,' Shelton said.
Victoria Wimberley, owner of an Atlanta-based event planning business, brought four busloads of people to Washington for the 2009 inauguration.
She's coming again, though with two fewer buses, which she blamed on the high price for accommodations and not any lack of excitement for Obama.
Superfan: Victoria Wimberley, who will be
attending President Barack Obama's inauguration for the second time,
looks over some of the memorabilia in her home in Decatur, Georgia
Selling: A vendor hawks Obama merchandise in Washington, DC, ahead of his inauguration
Some of those who wanted a seat on one of Wimberley's buses weren't as sure Obama would win in November as they were that he would win in 2008.
As a result, they held off on booking hotel rooms.
Then came Thanksgiving, preparing for Christmas and concerns about whether Obama and congressional Republicans would strike a deal to stop mandatory tax increases and spending cuts known as the 'fiscal cliff' from taking effect with the new year.
Fitful negotiations went down to the wire, with Congress sending Obama a bill late on New Year's Day.
When people did get around to pricing hotel rooms 'they just couldn't afford them,' Wimberley said. Many hotels are charging hundreds of dollars a night for a room and requiring guests to stay at least three nights or four nights.
Cost has been 'the major conversation for lots and lots and lots of people,' Wimberley said.
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