Loading streams...
Now Playing
Connect with Us
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Most Active Stories
- New York's "local" beef, often not as local as you think
- Remington Arms' owner breaks silence on state's gun laws
- The WRVO MemberCard Thank You! Tour
- Seven years of spinning turbines have brought windfall to Lewis County communities
- Rally hopes to shed light on diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease
It's All Politics
Presidential Double Take: The Difference Four Years Makes
Originally published on Mon January 21, 2013 3:56 pm
By editor

Credit Getty Images/AFP / NPR
President Obama seems to have picked up a few gray hairs in the four years since he was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2009 (left). On the right, he's shown in December 2012.

Credit AP / NPR
Here's President Dwight Eisenhower and first lady Mamie on Inauguration Day in 1953 (left) and 1957 (right).

Credit Getty Images/AFP / NPR
President Obama seems to have picked up a few gray hairs in the four years since he was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2009 (left). On the right, he's shown in December 2012.

Credit AP / NPR
President Ronald Reagan posed for an official White House photo during his first year in office (1981, left). On right, he spoke to the nation early in his second term, in February 1986.

Credit AP / NPR
President Bill Clinton's January 1993 official White House photo (left) is stacked up against an image of him being sworn in for a second time on Jan. 20, 1997.
Every president gets sworn in once, but it's a smaller club of presidents who manage to get there twice. Here's a look at some recent presidents who served two terms. See who changed the most (or the least) in four years.
Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.9(MDAyNDUyNTY4MDEyNDU5NTA0MzAxYzQ4NQ001))
9(MDAyNDUyNTY4MDEyNDU5NTA0MzAxYzQ4NQ001))
