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Eight years of Obama in the White House; a call for compromise

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Budget deficits.

National debt.

The uncertain economy.

The war in Afghanistan.

Terrorist threats at home and abroad.

The gnawing realization that the American dream is slipping away from the nation’s middle class.

Obama can point to his accomplishments during his first term: health care overhaul, economic stimulus package, end of the Iraq war, allowing gays to openly serve in the military, the killing of Osama bin Laden, and the government bailout of two Detroit-based automakers.

The campaign, thankfully, is over, but the status quo remains: The White House and Senate stay in Democratic hands, the House in Republican hands.

Can the arguing among national leaders come to an end?

Republican candidate, former Gov. Mitt Romney, and his running mate, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, put forth some positive proposals. Just because the ideas came from Republicans should not mean that the Obama administration dismisses them outright. In any give-and-take situation, after all, both sides have to give.

Barack Obama’s presidency will now extend a full 8 years.

Democrats, Republicans and the president must learn from the mistakes of the past 4 years, do a better job the next 4 years, and work together to restore America.

After all, quite a bit can happen in 8 years.

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