It's official: Obama wins presidency
By 
GINGER GIBSON | 1/4/13 1:53 PM EST          
The outcome wasn’t a surprise: Barack Obama was reelected Friday to a second term as president.
There  was no fretting about Ohio’s 18 electoral votes. There was no doubt  about who would take Florida’s 29. And it was just a matter of reading a  script to officially cast Virginia’s 13.
                 
The votes of the much-discussed but quickly forgotten Electoral  College were tallied and certified in a joint session of Congress on  Friday.
For Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, there were 332 votes cast.  Republican Mitt Romney and running mate Paul Ryan received 206 votes.
Only a handful of members of the House and Senate attended the  ceremonial proceedings, and Ryan, a Wisconsin congressman, wasn’t among  them. There were more spectators in the galleries than members in the  chamber.
The process, which in the early days of the nation would have been  more suspenseful but is now simply a constitutional formality, went off  without a hitch. The actual electors met in their respective states in  December to cast their ballots. Friday’s process was the counting and  certifying of those ballots that were sent to Washington.
The Electoral College, meant to provide a balance instead of a direct  popular vote system, has come under fire in the past decade. But the  actual proceedings were barely a blip on the radar, taking less than 30  minutes from start to finish.
Biden and Speaker John Boehner presided over the proceedings as four  members took turns reading the certificates that had been mailed by each  state. The ballots arrived in the House chamber in locked wooden boxes,  held together with aged leather straps, that were proceeded in by  student pages. Staff used ceremonial letter openers to excise each form  from its envelope.
Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), Rep.  Candice Miller (R-Mich.) and Rep. Robert Brady (D-Pa.) were the  designated tellers, tasked with reading each state’s certification and  keeping the tally.
Occasionally, when the votes of a particular state were announced in  favor of Obama, a member from there cheered. And applause erupted after  Biden officially called the session to an end.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) watched as the votes  were tallied, smiling as the process was conducted. Then she moved to  sit next to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), and the two  chatted as the states at the end of the alphabet were read.
On the Republican side of the chamber, House Majority Leader Eric  Cantor (R-Va.) sat with newly appointed Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), and the  two talked and laughed while waiting for the ceremony to conclude.
              
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http://www.politico.com/story/2013/0...#ixzz2H2sRIa00