Obama to reemerge in the fall, help rebuild Democratic Party

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Former President Barack Obama will re-emerge on the national scene this fall, though Democrats expect him to do so with caution.

One aide describes the beginning of a “delicate dance” that aims to put Obama in the Democratic fray but prevents him from remaining the face of the party.

Aides will huddle with Obama in the coming weeks to plot out what shape the former president's fall schedule will take. Advisers close to him say that while he will play an active role in helping his party rebuild, much of his work will be behind the scenes.

He is likely to take on fundraising, for example, something he has done for the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the National Democratic Redistricting Committee since leaving office.
In recent months, Obama has played a larger behind-the-scenes role than was publicly known.

The Hill reported in July that he met with DNC Chairman Tom Perez as well as lawmakers at his office to give his guidance on a number of issues.

But advisers to the former president acknowledge he also doesn’t want to be “a foil” — as one top ally put it — for President Trump and the Republican leadership.

In recent months, Trump blamed Obama for doing “nothing” about Russia’s involvement in the 2016 presidential election. He also taunted him for never coming to a Boy Scout jamboree and went after his policies on everything from healthcare to Cuba and North Korea.

Obama has chosen to remain silent. And even during the recent healthcare fight over his signature legislation, for example, he sought to keep a low profile.

“He has to be careful,” said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. “At a moment when President Trump’s approval is falling so fast — including with his base — there is a risk for Obama taking center stage and triggering the energy that many Republicans currently lack.”

“He would be the target against which Trump would direct his fury,” said Cal Jillson, a professor of political science at Southern Methodist University. “From Trump’s perspective nothing better could happen.”

Jillson said that a light Obama footprint on the national stage could allow breathing room for future Democratic leaders to emerge.

“He’ll tread lightly because he is not going to be the face of the party when it actually counts in 2020 and 2024,” Jillson said. “So the extent to which he would emerge and speak to a wide range of issues would preclude the emergence of someone else. They must find a standard-bearer for future elections, and I think he can at least in the short term suck up all the available oxygen.”

To that point, Democrats have also worried about Hillary Clinton’s presence on the national stage.

Clinton is slated to release a book this fall titled “What Happened” in which she is promising to provide candid details on why she thinks she lost the 2016 presidential election.

Democrats are feeling angst about Clinton’s re-emergence, worrying that it will point to a party looking backward instead of forward.

“It’s wise for both Clinton and Obama to hang back at this point,” one Democratic strategist said. “Otherwise our party will have an even harder time rebounding.

“We already lack a party leader, we lack a vision, we lack an identity,” the strategist said bluntly. “We can’t remain stuck in the past.”

Since leaving office, Obama’s approval rating remains high at 63 percent, according to a Gallup survey conducted in June.

“President Obama has amongst the highest Q-rating in the world — exceeding LaBron [James], [Lionel] Messi and George Clooney — and is most certainly the most popular active political figure in the U.S.,” said Democratic strategist Chris Lehane. “[He] is incredibly popular with base Democratic voters who are critical cohorts in the midterms from a turnout perspective."

Democratic strategist David Wade added that “it’s a great moment for President Obama to emerge.”

"Unlike many of his recent predecessors, he left office without scandal and with high approval ratings,” Wade said. “And with the incumbent president in the White House bogged down by investigation and deep unpopularity, the contrast is helpful.

“Pundits are always going to overthink and overanalyze the pros and cons of having a former president on the campaign trail, but the truth is, there’s little downside. He has unique convening powers to draw a crowd, energize Democrats, make a closing argument, and then it is up to candidates to close the deal.”

Obama has already committed to campaign for Ralph Northam, the Democrat running for governor of Virginia. And he is expected to help other candidates running in races in November.

Aides to Obama would not detail how many requests they’ve received from Democratic candidates hoping to have the former president appear alongside them at campaign events. And they would not detail how many appearances Obama would make in the fall.

“It remains to be seen,” one aide said.


http://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/346097-obama-to-reemerge-in-delicate-dance-with-dems
 

xxxbishopxxx

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
A part of me thinks Obama should just say fuck it and move on. Dems had 8 years to work with him. I think it was the 2014 mid-terms when dems publicly refused Obama's help with their re-election campaigns. Some even ran as anti-Obama dems.
 

MASTERBAKER

༺ S❤️PER❤️ ᗰOD ༻
Super Moderator
Barack Obama is delivering his first major address since leaving office


MAJOR OBAMA SPEECH: Fmr. Pres. Barack Obama is delivering his first major address since leaving office, speaking to an estimated crowd of 15,000 at an event in South Africa honoring anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela. Obama remarks are ‘expected to be a rebuke to many of Trump’s policies,’ the AP reports.

 

QueEx

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Super Moderator
OCT. 29, 2018 AT 12:04 PM


Election Update:
New Polls Show Tight Races In 2 Key Obama-Trump Districts


By Geoffrey Skelley

Filed under 2018 Election

Welcome to our Election Update for Monday, Oct. 29! As of 12:00 p.m., the Classic version of the FiveThirtyEight House forecast gave Democrats a 6 in 7 chance (86.4 percent) of taking control, which is roughly where Democrats stood one week ago (86.5 percent). We have consistentlyemphasizedtheimportance of Obama-Trump districts — that is, districts that Barack Obama carried in 2012 but that Donald Trump won in 2016. These swingy seats are a key part of the House arithmetic, and as FiveThirtyEight editor-in-chief Nate Silver laid out last week, they may offer more returns for Democrats than Romney-Clinton districts. And the new polls we have in two Obama-Trump districts found very close contests, each in states that could help make or break Democrats’ chances in the House. In the Iowa 3rd, a survey from Siena College and The New York Times found Democrat Cindy Axne narrowly ahead of Republican Rep. David Young, 43 percent to 41 percent. That finding echoes the previous Siena College/New York Times poll from a month ago, which showed Axne up 1 point. The razor-thin polling makes sense when you consider recent presidential results: Trump won the 3rd by 3.5 points while Obama carried it by a bit more than 4. In the Lite version of our House forecast, which relies only on district and national polling, the 3rd is a toss-up contest where neither candidate has more than a 3 in 5 chance of winning. But the Classic version of the forecast, which includes fundamentals along with polls, rates the district as “Lean D” and gives Axne a 7 in 10 edge. Although it has only four House seats, Iowa could provide Democrats with two of the 23 net seats they need for a majority. The 3rd is the most competitive seat in the state, with the Iowa 1st — another Obama-Trump seat — looking like a Democratic pick-up. (Incumbent GOP Rep. Rod Blum is under an ethics investigation and has trailed Democratic challenger Abby Finkenauer in fundraising and in the polls.)

As for our second Obama-Trump district, two new polls in the New Jersey 3rd found conflicting results but show a tight contest for Democrats looking to take back the seat. Monmouth University’s latest surveyfound Democrat Andy Kim up 49 percent to 45 percent over Republican Rep. Tom MacArthur, once we averaged the pollster’s different turnout scenarios. But Siena College/New York Times foundMacArthur ahead 45 percent to 44 percent. Allthreeversions of our forecast show this race to be a toss-up, with Kim having a slight edge in each. A district that voted for Obama by 4.6 points and Trump by a little more than 6, the 3rd is the most competitive seat in New Jersey based on our forecast. The Garden State is a pivotal piece of the Democrats’ majority jigsaw puzzle, with potentially four Democratic gains, including one other Obama-Trump seat, the New Jersey 2nd, that looks to be a near-certain Democratic win. (The latest polls we have indicate a 19-point lead for Democrat Jeff Van Drew in this open seat.) These are only 4 of the 21 Obama-Trump districts in the country (and nine are already held by Democrats), so Democrats will need to pick up more than just these seats to regain a House majority. But if polling is any indication, Democrats’ chances look decent in these seats and strong in the House as a whole.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Obama Is Getting Tired of Trump’s Cheetos-Dusted Fingers Staining His Legacy


View attachment 2940
Photo: Scott Olson (Getty Images)


The Root
Stephen A. Crockett Jr.

April 3, 2020


A man can only take so much.

Former President Barack Obama has been silently watching as the man racist white people voted into office works tirelessly to destroy the country. He’s been busy loving his wife and enjoying his time away from the spotlight as the evil orange Russian operative continues to tear away at his legacy.

But, on Tuesday the former president who many, including myself, wish was the current president took to Twitter to insist on “all of us, especially young people,” demanding better of the government, after learning that during a global pandemic the Trump administration’s rolled back fuel standards put in place to try and flatten the curve of global warming.

“We’ve seen all too terribly the consequences of those who denied warnings of a pandemic. We can’t afford any more consequences of climate denial,” Obama wrote on Tuesday, the New York Post reports.

“All of us, especially young people, have to demand better of our government at every level and vote this fall,” he continued.

The only president we recognize linked to a Los Angeles Times article announcing that Obama-era fuel standards had been slashed by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s cuckold.

The new rule “comes from both the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation and would allow automakers to ignore ambitious gas mileage and emissions requirements put in place by the Obama administration in 2012,” according to the New York Post.

“Before, automakers were required to produce fleets that would average 55 miles per gallon by 2025.

The new Trump-era rule will bring that number down to 40 miles per gallon by 2026.”


Former Vice President Joe Biden, who is likely to be the Democratic presidential nominee, “has vowed to toughen fuel economy standards in order to ensure 100% of new sales for light- and medium-duty vehicles will be electrified,” the Post reports.

Now if only we could go back to the beginning of March when we could walk outside without hazmat suits and the former president could go back to jet skiing and Trump could go back to hating all of Obama’s photos on IG.


____________________________________________
Stephen A. Crockett Jr.
Posts
Senior Editor @ The Root, boxes outside my weight class, when they go low, you go lower.
____________________________________________




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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Obama says White House response to coronavirus has been 'absolute chaotic disaster'


CNN
By Jeff Zeleny
Sat May 9, 2020



(CNN) Former President Barack Obama delivered a blistering critique of the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus crisis, describing it as "an absolute chaotic disaster" during a private call Friday night with people who worked for him in the White House and across his administration.

The searing comments, confirmed to CNN by three former Obama administration officials on the call, offered the starkest assessment yet from the former president about how President Donald Trump and his team have handled the deadly pandemic and why he believes Democrats must rally behind former Vice President Joe Biden to defeat Trump in November.

In a 30-minute conversation with members of the Obama Alumni Association, the former president said the response to the coronavirus outbreak served as a critical reminder for why strong government leadership is needed during a global crisis. The call was intended to encourage former Obama staffers to become more engaged in Biden's presidential campaign.


"This election that's coming up -- on every level -- is so important because what we're going to be battling is not just a particular individual or a political party," Obama said. "What we're fighting against is these long-term trends in which being selfish, being tribal, being divided, and seeing others as an enemy -- that has become a stronger impulse in American life."

The comments were first reported by Yahoo News, which obtained an audio recording of the call. A spokesman for Obama declined to comment or elaborate on the former president's remarks.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Saturday dismissed the criticism from Obama, saying in a statement to CNN: "President Trump's coronavirus response has been unprecedented and saved American lives."


Regarding Michael Flynn:
The White House did not respond to Obama's comments on the Department of Justice's decision to drop charges against Michael Flynn.​
Weighing in on the case during the call, Obama said Attorney General William Barr's decision to drop the criminal case against Flynn suggested "the rule of law was at risk" in the United States. Before taking office, Obama warned Trump about Flynn and raised questions about his conduct with Russia.​

But Obama saved his strongest words for the Trump administration's handling of the coronavirus crisis and its worldview.

"It's part of the reason why the response to this global crisis has been so anemic and spotty," Obama said. "It would have been bad even with the best of governments. It has been an absolute chaotic disaster when that mindset -- of 'what's in it for me' and 'to heck with everybody else' -- when that mindset is operationalized in our government."


He added: "That's why, I, by the way, am going to be spending as much time as necessary and campaigning as hard as I can for Joe Biden."

After formally endorsing Biden last month, Obama said he would be deeply involved in the campaign to help Biden win the White House. His remarks on Friday night were the latest example of that effort, telling the Obama Alumni group: "I am hoping that all of you feel the same sense of urgency that I do."

This story has been updated with the White House's response to Obama's comments.

CNN's Kristen Holmes contributed to this report.



 
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