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The power of rhetoric and the rhetoric of power: Exploring a tension within the Obama presidency

DOI: 10.4000/ejas.9578

Keywords: Islam , Barack Obama , John McCain , Abraham Lincoln , Civil War , Cold War , Israel , anti-intellectualism , Nobel Peace prize , Afghanistan , Homeland Security , New Deal , welfare state , Democratic Party , Gettysburg Address , Internet , Guantanamo Bay , unitary executive , anti-terrorist surveillance , signing statement , National Security Agency , Geneva Conventions , anti-Americanism , executive power , War Powers Resolution , Libya , Wikileaks , Pentagon Papers , executive privilege , Truman Steel S

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Abstract:

When Barack Obama acceded to the Presidency of the United States he held out the promise of a new beginning. As a master of political rhetoric he had spoken of a new start following the dismal years of the Bush administration. He would take America back to its inspirational creed of freedom and democracy. He augured a break with policies infringing on civil liberties and government under the law. Once in office, though, the power of rhetoric that had carried him into the White House ran into the hard reality of political rule under conditions of ongoing wars in far-away countries and the threat of terrorism, lurking at home and abroad. This chapter will explore how well President Obama managed to preserve democratic freedoms at home while fighting terrorism.

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