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President Trump inauguration, morning

Politics

360 View: Crowds gather for inauguration at U.S. Capitol

Watch as crowds gather to celebrate the swearing in of President-elect Donald Trump

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Newsday puts you at the center of the action with a YouTube 360-degree video experience early Jan. 20, 2017. Look around by dragging your mouse on your computer, swiping your mobile screen or tilting your mobile device right, left, up or down. (Credit: Newsday / Jeffrey Basinger)

Note: On mobile devices, the 360-degree video experience can be viewed only in the YouTube app.

More News

Behind the scenes of Trump’s inauguration

See how Washington is preparing for the president-elect’s swearing-in ceremony.

What Donald Trump needs to do in his inaugural address

President-elect Donald Trump will take the oath of office on the steps of the Capitol shortly before noon.

How do you feel about Trump’s inauguration?

Share your thoughts. Are you hopeful or fearful? Engaged by politics or turned away?

5 key issues Donald Trump is likely to face

The President-elect has promised to bring jobs back, destroy ISIS and build a wall on the Southern border with Mexico.

President Trump inauguration, protests

Politics

360 View: Protests on the eve of the inauguration

Watch anti-Trump demonstrations outside The Deploraball pre-inauguration event in Washington D.C.

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Newsday puts you at the center of the action with a YouTube 360-degree video experience on Jan. 19, 2017. Look around by dragging your mouse on your computer, swiping your mobile screen or tilting your mobile device right, left, up or down. (Credit: Newsday / Jeffrey Basinger)

Note: On mobile devices, the 360-degree video experience can be viewed only in the YouTube app.

More News

Behind the scenes of Trump’s inauguration

See how Washington is preparing for the president’s swearing-in ceremony.

What Donald Trump needs to do in his inaugural address

President Donald Trump will take the oath of office on the steps of the Capitol shortly before noon.

How do you feel about Trump’s inauguration?

Share your thoughts. Are you hopeful or fearful? Engaged by politics or turned away?

5 key issues Donald Trump is likely to face

The President has promised to bring jobs back, destroy ISIS and build a wall on the Southern border with Mexico.

President Trump inauguration 360 view

Politics

Couldn’t make it to D.C.? Get a 360 view of the events

Click through these videos to watch Inauguration Day from protests to Donald Trump taking the oath of office

Alt Video TextPlay 360° Video

Newsday puts you at the center of the action with a YouTube 360-degree video experience of the Women’s March on Washington. Look around by dragging your mouse on your computer, swiping your mobile screen or tilting your mobile device right, left, up or down. (Credit: Newsday/Jeffrey Basinger/William Perlman)

Note: On mobile devices, the 360-degree video experience can be viewed only in the YouTube app.

More News

Behind the scenes of Trump’s inauguration

See how Washington is preparing for the president’s swearing-in ceremony.

What Donald Trump needs to do in his inaugural address

President Donald Trump will take the oath of office on the steps of the Capitol shortly before noon.

How do you feel about Trump’s inauguration?

Share your thoughts. Are you hopeful or fearful? Engaged by politics or turned away?

5 key issues Donald Trump is likely to face

The President has promised to bring jobs back, destroy ISIS and build a wall on the Southern border with Mexico.

Which rule would you change in baseball?

Professional baseball has been around for almost 150 years, but the rules look far different now than they did back in 1869. Most of those are for the better, but the rules of the game have long been a topic for debate. As more rule changes are considered, what suggestions would you have for Major League Baseball?

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Please respond in 300 words or less. All submissions will be moderated and edited prior to posting. We may use your contact information to verify your submission, but we won’t sell or share it. Your submission may be used in any format.

Share Your #LIWinterShots

Enjoying the winter season and all the things that come along with it? No matter what fun activities you have planned, we want to see your photos! The best ones could show up on air! So send them all season long using #LIWinterShots! Or share them here, and be sure to include your name. (Captions were submitted by readers who shared their photos.)

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What do you want to hear from Donald Trump during his inaugural address?

Presidents have captured the mood of the nation in their inaugural addresses. FDR said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” John F. Kennedy said, “Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country.” Ronald Reagan said, “It is time for us to realize that we’re too great a nation to limit ourselves to small dreams.”

What sentiment could Donald Trump express on Jan. 20 that would inspire you?

The presidents we cited made their point succinctly, we ask that you do so in 30 words or less.

Submit your inaugural phrase.

Thank you for your submission. You will be contacted by Newsday before we publish your story.

Please respond in 30 words or less. Your response becomes the property of Newsday Media Group. It will be edited and may be republished in all media.

The legacy of Barack Obama

The legacy of Barack Obama

Obama’s eight-year presidency envisioned as a 16-episode TV series.

Published: Jan. 10, 2017 Photo Credit: AP / Susan Walsh

A Euphoric Beginning

Episode 1: 2008

A young senator from Illinois sweeps to a resounding victory, inspiring millions while becoming the first African-American …

… to be elected president of the United States. He brings hope and the promise of a new day in politics to Washington — while preparing to take office during troubled economic times.

Photo Credit: Getty Images / Joe Raedle Read more

Mantle of Power

Episode 2: 2009

The president soars into office before more than a million cheering Americans at his inauguration, but he is enmeshed …

… in two wars and the “gathering clouds and raging storms” of an economy teetering on the brink of another Great Depression. In his first 100 days he fights to push through a massive stimulus bill and is forced to choose between an expensive and unpopular bailout or letting two giant companies and more than a million jobs potentially vanish. His high-powered wife looks for a cause to champion while their two young children settle into a new school — and pick a White House dog.

Photo Credit: AP / Elise Amendola Read more

All in on health care

Episode 3: 2009 – 2010

Reeling Republicans unite against Obama, leading him to abandon a key campaign promise to be bipartisan to muscle through his health care overhaul. On foreign policy, Obama — who earlier became the first sitting U.S. president in nearly 90 years to win the Nobel Peace Prize — makes a nuclear arms deal with Russia and holds a summit on decreasing nuclear materials.

Photo Credit: AP / Charles Dharapak

The ‘shellacking’

Episode 4: 2010

With the economy in doldrums and nearly 10 percent of the country out of work, anger about the rising tide of debt and big government health care coalesces into a tea party wave that propels a GOP takeover of the House in the midterm elections. A somber Obama ruefully calls the election “a shellacking” and scrambles with his advisers to decide what to do next.

Photo Credit: AP / Charles Dharapak

‘Minutes passed like days’

Episode 5: May 1, 2011

Obama secretly has to make one of his biggest decisions in office. Should he send Navy SEAL Team Six on a risky mission to take out Osama bin Laden? As the president and his advisers watch the consequences of his choice unfold in real time from the Situation Room, “the minutes passed like days.” Obama makes a dramatic nighttime announcement from the White House.

Photo Credit: AP / The White House / Pete Souza

The president’s picks

Episode 6: 2012

Some of the presidency is actually fun and games. Obama decompresses by proclaiming his picks for his annual NCAA Tournament bracket. He welcomes a key foreign ally, scarfing down hot dogs at a tournament game — while squeezing in a visit to a swing state he’ll need in the upcoming election.

Photo Credit: AP / Carolyn Kaster

A new rival rises

Episode 7: 2012

Obama and the nation watch live as reporters rush to relay the Supreme Court’s verdict on the constitutionality of his Affordable Care Act, handing the president a major victory. He spends his summer kicking his re-election campaign into high gear as GOP rival Mitt Romney attacks his policies and argues he’d be a better leader for America.

Photo Credit: AP / Charles Dharapak

Benghazi

Episode 8: September 2012

The president is told the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans have been killed in Benghazi. The administration initially calls it a spontaneous street protest, but it is later found to be a premeditated attack by Islamic extremists — a mistake that engulfs Obama in political turmoil as he’s forced to answer charges he’s weak on terrorism.

Photo Credit: AFP / Getty Images

What just happened?

Episode 9: Oct. 3, 2012

A rusty Obama prepares for a prime-time showdown with Romney that’s his first debate in four years. The results shock his advisers, as the polls dramatically tighten and his re-election suddenly appears in jeopardy. Can he summon a comeback?

Photo Credit: AP / Charlie Neibergall

Re-elected

Episode 10: Nov. 6-7, 2012

A nail-biting election goes late into the night. The president, who found his footing in the last two debates, tells the American people “we have fought our way back” and that the country’s “best is yet to come.” He and Michelle Obama look back at the past four years — as the first dad tells Ryan Seacrest their daughters will be allowed to date during his second term.

Photo Credit: Getty Images / Scott Olson

Trayvon ‘could have been me’

Episode 11: July 19, 2013

Obama makes a rare public reflection on race after a high-profile acquittal in the shooting death of a Florida teen. “Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago,” Obama says. “There are very few African-American men in this country who haven’t had the experience of being followed when they were shopping in a department store,” he says. “That includes me.”

Photo Credit: AP / Carolyn Kaster

4th-quarter points

Episode 12: 2014 – 2015

Democrats lose the Senate in the midterm elections and Obama prepares to go it alone in the “fourth quarter” of his presidency. In a flurry of executive actions and foreign policy maneuvers he tries to forestall the deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants, restore diplomatic relations with Cuba and reach a nuclear deal with Iran.

Photo Credit: EPA / Jim Bourg

Twin threats

Episode 13: 2015

Shortly after Obama and more than 150 world leaders meet in Paris to try to hammer out a climate deal, he’s forced to turn his attention back to the immediate threat of terrorism as an attack in San Bernardino, Calif., leaves 14 dead. He prepares to address the nation from the Oval Office.

Photo Credit: Getty Images / Kevin Frayer

Powerless on guns

Episode 14: Jan. 5, 2016

The president is often called the most powerful man in the world.

But he can never get Congress to act on gun control, even as one mass shooting after another — with victims ranging from school kids to veteran police officers — happens during his tenure. More than three years after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Obama hosts an event at the White House on gun violence and sheds rare public tears. “Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad,” he says. The NRA slams his latest plan as “ripe for abuse.”

Photo Credit: AP / Carolyn Kaster Read more

Challenge to his legacy

Episode 15: 2016

His approval ratings surge and the unemployment rate drops, but voters reject his chosen successor and turn …

… to Donald Trump, a man who’s his polar opposite in policy and temperament, leaving his legacy in jeopardy. The president pushes himself and his staff to the finish line, fighting a losing battle with Republicans over a Supreme Court nominee and trying to prevent Obamacare from being dismantled — while facing challenges from Russia, terrorists, Syria and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the waning days.

Photo Credit: AP / Pablo Martinez Monsivais Read more

An end and a beginning

Episode 16: 2017

Obama’s presidency comes to a close, but this is not the end for him and Michelle.

Though cornerstones of his policy record hang in the balance and his political legacy is still to be determined, his place in American history is firmly cemented and they vow to remain actively engaged. Obama is only 55 and Michelle a few years younger — with much of their story still left to be written.

Photo Credit: Getty Images / Aude Guerrucci Read more
35 images from Obama’s presidency to remember

See memorable and unforgettable images from the Obama presidency.

Obama pop culture moments: Like, dislike or don’t care?

Obama has been more comfortable in a wider variety of pop culture settings than perhaps any of his predecessors.

What will you remember most about President Obama?

Share your thoughts about President Obama on our reader interactive.

Our most memorable Obama covers

Forty of Newsday’s most memorable covers on Barack Obama as a presidential candidate and president.

The legacy of Barack Obama

President Barack Obama has been many things in his eight years in office. As the nation’s first African-American president, he will always symbolize a historic breakthrough. The Democrat’s ambitious agenda — ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, reforming health care, retooling the economy for the 21st century, resetting policy toward longtime adversaries such as Iran and Cuba, improving race relations, leading on climate change — proved controversial and produced uneven results.

Despite his campaign promise, Obama was unable to change the culture of Washington. The race to succeed him revealed just how divided America is — and the next president, Republican Donald Trump, could reverse many of Obama’s policies, putting his long-term legacy in peril.

Here are assessments of Obama’s legacy as his tenure ends.

A look back at Obama's presidency

His impact

A look back at Obama's presidency

Barack Obama sought to be a transformational president. Eight years later, he prepares to leave office having overseen a turbulent time in history, Newsday's Yancey Roy writes.

AFP / Getty Images / Jewel Samad

What if Obama's 8 years had been a TV show?

Obama's arc

What if Obama's 8 years had been a TV show?

The story of the 44th presidency in 16 episodes, from the euphoric dawn of the Obama era to his chosen successor's loss to Donald Trump, a man who is his polar opposite in policy and temperament.

EPA / Jim Bourg

The last speech

Bowing out

The last speech

Top photos from President Obama's farewell address in Chicago.

AP / Charles Rex Arbogast

35 images to remember

Obama in photos

35 images to remember

Memorable images from Obama's presidency.

The White House / Pete Souza

Pop culture moments: Like 'em or not?

Cast your vote

Pop culture moments: Like 'em or not?

Obama has been more comfortable in a wider variety of pop culture settings than perhaps any of his predecessors.

AP / Charles Dharapak

10 things named after Obama

Inspired by Obama

10 things named after Obama

Have you heard about the spider named after the president? Or the Obama phone?

AFP / Getty Images / Peter Muhly

Cartoons: The Obama presidency

Fresh takes

Cartoons: The Obama presidency

Editorial cartoonists from around the country on Barack Obama.

Roll Call / RJ Matson

What’s next for Michelle Obama?

Leaving 'the White House bubble'

What’s next for Michelle Obama?

The world is Michelle Obama's oyster. What she'll take on in the future has sparked the imaginations of many.

Getty Images Entertainment / Paul Morigi

What will you remember most?

Parting thoughts

What will you remember most?

Loved him? Can't wait to see him go? Share your thoughts about President Obama.

AP / Jae C. Hong

Obama's visits from sports champions

In the house

Obama's visits from sports champions

It's a tradition for sports champions to visit the president at the White House after their victories.

AP / Charles Dharapak

Malia and Sasha through the years

First family

Malia and Sasha through the years

Take a look back at how the first daughters have grown up.

Getty Images / Mark Wilson

Front page news

Covering Obama

Front page news

See 40 of Newsday's most memorable covers on Barack Obama, from 2008 to 2016.

Newsday

How are you feeling about Donald Trump’s inauguration?

Donald Trump will become the nation’s 45th president on Friday. We want to know what you are feeling as the inauguration approaches.

Share your emotions by placing yourself on the grid below: Are you hopeful or fearful? Engaged by politics or turned away?

When you submit your response, tell us how you identify politically. We’ll use that information to help analyze the results.

The graph below is shaded according to the number of responses received. The deeper the shade of blue, the more readers who placed themselves in that location.

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