Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Jeffrey A. Bader, Who Helped Steer Obama’s ‘Pivot’ to Asia, Dies at 78 – The New York Times

Jeffrey A. Bader, one of the countrys leading experts on China and an architect of President Barack Obamas so-called pivot to the Pacific during his first administration, died on Oct. 22 in Los Angeles. He was 78.

His death, at a hospice facility, resulted from complications of pancreatic cancer, said his wife, Rohini Talalla. He lived in the Venice Beach section of Los Angeles.

In a statement, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken called Mr. Bader one of the most knowledgeable and insightful East Asia hands of his generation, adding that his intellect was matched only by his heart and his decency.

Few Americans had as much diplomatic or policymaking experience in China as Mr. Bader did. His engagement with the country went back to 1977, when, as a young Foreign Service officer, he was enlisted to help President Jimmy Carters administration implement formal relations with Beijing.

The work put him deep within the machinery of American diplomacy, training that gave him keen insight into how foreign relations actually work not through grand ideologies and statements, but through the day-to-day grind of person-to-person contact.

In the late 1990s, Mr. Bader led the East Asia portfolio for the National Security Council under President Bill Clinton. He reprised that role a decade later under Mr. Obama.

He really was the quintessential effective diplomat, Susan Shirk, a political scientist at the University of California, San Diego, who worked alongside him in the Clinton administration, said in a phone interview. He was the sharpest operations person.

Mr. Bader advised both Mr. Clinton and Mr. Obama to take a pragmatic, cleareyed view of China. He largely rejected both the sentimental view that China was on a path toward greater openness and democracy and the hawkish pessimism that predicted an inevitable clash between the two powers.

U.S. policy toward a rising China could not rely solely on military muscle, economic blandishments and pressure and sanctions on human rights, he wrote in his memoir, Obama and Chinas Rise: An Insiders Account of Americas Asia Strategy (2012). At the same time, a policy of indulgence and accommodation of assertive Chinese conduct, or indifference to its internal evolution, could embolden bad behavior.

After serving as a close adviser to Mr. Obama during his 2008 campaign, Mr. Bader helped oversee what the president called his pivot to Asia a term that Mr. Bader shied from, finding it overly militaristic (though the policy shift did have a strong military component).

He preferred to call it a rebalancing, a term that recognized the growing importance of China to Americas future and the need to dedicate more resources to managing bilateral relations. He recommended a nuanced approach, recognizing that China was an emerging global power that needed to be addressed but not confronted.

He was not nave about China, but he saw the importance of a constructive relationship, said former Gov. Jerry Brown of California, who now serves as chairman of the California-China Climate Institute at the University of California, Berkeley, and who relied on Mr. Bader for advice in recent years. He had a view that was more realistic and optimistic.

Jeffrey Allen Bader was born in New York City on July 1, 1945, to Samuel Bader, a lawyer, and Grace (Rosenbloom) Bader, a lawyer and homemaker.

He graduated with a degree in history from Yale in 1967 and received a doctorate in the same subject from Columbia in 1975, the same year he joined the State Department.

He married Ms. Talalla, a documentary filmmaker and advocate for Indigenous development, in 1995. Along with her, he is survived by his brother, Lawrence.

Mr. Bader did not start his diplomatic career aspiring to be a China hand. He had studied European history, spoke French and spent his first two years at the U.S. embassy in Kinshasa, the capital of the present-day Democratic Republic of Congo.

But in 1977, Richard Holbrooke, the new assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, was on the hunt for smart, young officers to help with the enormous efforts underway around U.S.-China relations. He plucked out Mr. Bader and set him on the task.

There was much to cover: trade, nuclear weapons, human rights and Americas complicated relationship with Taiwan. There wasnt even a U.S. embassy in Beijing.

Mr. Bader lived in Beijing for several years, an experience he often described in detail to explain how far the country had come.

The city itself was a pretty dreary, dismal place, he said in a 2022 podcast interview with The China Project, a news and information website. There were no restaurants, no publicly available restaurants at all. I had every meal essentially in the Peking Hotel for two years, which is a fate I wouldnt wish on anyone.

He left in 1983 but returned four years later to find clear signs of the modern consumer economy the country would become.

He also saw the dangers in Chinas rise. Mr. Bader was central to framing Americas response to the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, and to the sudden tensions that arose after China carried out a series of missile tests near Taiwan in 1996.

He left the China beat in 1999 to serve for two years as the U.S. ambassador to Namibia. But he returned to it in 2001 as an assistant U.S. trade representative, helping to finalize Chinas ascension into the World Trade Organization.

Mr. Bader left government in 2002 to become a senior scholar at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. Then, in 2005, Mr. Obama, at the time a freshman senator from Illinois, asked him for a briefing about China.

The two spent three hours in the senators office, eating takeout Thai food and discussing policy. Mr. Bader left their meeting convinced that if Mr. Obama ran for president, he would win and that he would want to be a part of an Obama administration.

The Obama White House, especially in its first term, was preoccupied with China. The global recession had set America back but had relatively spared China, which began to assert itself internationally.

Mr. Bader stayed with Mr. Obama for more than two years before returning to Brookings, long enough to see the pivot underway and to believe that America was on the right course. And while he later criticized Donald J. Trumps administration for its protectionist approach to China, he was not alarmed. He remained convinced that the ebb and flow of tensions was simply part of great power relations.

Over time, there are interests that overlap to some degree and differ to some degree, he told The New York Times in 2012. The relationship tends to move up and down over time, as if along a sine curve. But the recent story is mostly a positive one.

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Jeffrey A. Bader, Who Helped Steer Obama's 'Pivot' to Asia, Dies at 78 - The New York Times

Obama team holds 15-year reunion – POLITICO – POLITICO

TGIF, Illinois. How many times can we say Obama in this newsletter?

President-elect Barack Obama and his family walk on stage for his election night party at Grant Park on Nov. 4, 2008. | Morry Gash/AP

REUNITED, FEELS SO GOOD: Former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama are in town with 2,500 former staffers from their presidential campaigns and administration to celebrate the 15th anniversary of Obamas historic election.

The Obama insiders started flying in Thursday, sending text messages to each other with the iconic Hope picture of Obama. Landed! theyd text Michael Strautmanis, now the executive vice president for external affairs for the Obama Foundation. He worked in Obamas administration.

The gathering went from large to sold out. Former staffers who signed up late were scrambling to find a way to join in the fun. On Thursday evening, various teams and departments that worked under Obama held mini reunions ahead of tonights big event. The Obamas popped in at the Salt Shed, per David Axelrod.

Obamas top bundlers gathered at the Hubbard Inn with Penny Pritzker and Rufus Gifford headlining. Pritzker was Finance Committee chair for Obamas 2008 campaign, and Gifford was finance chair for Obamas 2012 campaign. (Hes now heads the Biden-Harris finance team.)

Also spotted: Corporate lawyer Alan Solow and Andrea Solow, Ariel Investments John Rogers Jr., not-for-profit consultant Kevin Conlon, Legal Services Corp. Board Chair John Levi and Jill Levi, former U.S. Ambassadors to Canada David and Julie Jacobson and Bruce and Vicki Heyman, and Obama loyalist Susan Berghoef.

Other gatherings: The Presidential Correspondence Reunion was held at Michaels Original Pizzeria, the Department of Ag Reunion was at The Dearborn and Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Nevada teams all met around town, too. The wild and crazy Obama Media Team met at 11 p.m. at Chicago Illuminating Company.

Im starting to feel FOMO myself with all of the different parties around town, Strautmanis told Playbook, referring to the staffers fear of missing out.

Altogether tonight: All those groups will come together at McCormick Place today for the Obama Democracy Forum, followed by a reunion party for everyone under one roof.

While in town: President Obama took a tour Wednesday of the Obama Presidential Center, which is now halfway through construction.

Your Playbook host toured the site Tuesday. Check out my photos!

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The Chicago Host Committee and the 2024 Democratic National Convention Committee have released a first of its kind request for proposal for sustainability management and events programming.

The goal: To reduce the environmental impact of the convention as much as possible and create a blueprint for future conventions and large-scale events.

Hot spots: The sustainability manager will focus on United Center, McCormick Place and hotels.

The takeaway: For the first time in convention history, we are releasing an RFP for sustainability services, underscoring our commitment to making this one of the most environmentally friendly conventions ever, Host Committee Executive Director Christy George said in a statement.

Added DNCC Executive Director Alex Hornbrook: We know that big events can have big environmental footprints, and we are committed to reducing ours wherever possible.

If you are Barack Obama, Playbook would like to hear from you. Email [emailprotected]

A message from the Save My Scholarship Coalition:

Over 9,500 students are counting on the Illinois General Assembly to save the Tax Credit Scholarship Program. If they fail to act NOW, then students from low-income families will lose their scholarships, causing many to leave their best-fit schools. Most of these students are Black or Brown, and 100% are from households with demonstrated financial need. Additionally, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist. Do the right thing.

No official public events.

At McCormick Place at 10:30 a.m. to give opening remarks at Obamas Democracy Forum. At Union League Club at noon to give remarks at the Latino Policy Forum 15th anniversary celebration.

At McCormick Place at 2 p.m. for Obamas Democracy Forum.

Take a break from you Obama text chain and email me at [emailprotected]

National Association of Realtors CEO Bob Goldberg resigns, replaced by former Sun-Times CEO Nykia Wright: Goldbergs departure follows the resignation of former President Kenny Parcell, who was accused of sexual harassment, earlier this year, by Sun-Times Dorothy Hernandez.

Ellen Alberding, president and CEO of the Joyce Foundation, will step down: After completing a five-year strategy plan, Alberding said it made sense for a new CEO to step in and participate in the development of the organizations next strategic planning process, via Crains Brandon Dupr.

Jersey County in the Metro East area considers joining Missouri. Illinois AG says no: Illinois Attorney Gen. Kwame Raoul said the county does not have the authority to secede from the State of Illinois and join another state, by St. Louis Post-Dispatchs Kurt Erickson.

Springfields city employee residency requirement could be suspended, by Illinois Times Dean Olsen

Former UIC employees retaliation case may reveal gaps in state whistleblower protections, by Tribunes Talia Soglin

CHAOS AT CITY COUNCIL as Ald. Raymond Lopez tries to take over meeting after lights are turned off: The special meeting of the City Council had been called to vote on a resolution that, if approved, would add a nonbinding referendum to the March primary ballot asking Chicago voters if the city should maintain its status as a sanctuary city. The resolution never made it to a vote, and whether it will when the meeting is resumed Tuesday morning remains unclear, by Crains Justin Laurence.

City signs lease for site of potential Brighton Park migrant tent camp, leaving Ad. Julia Ramirez disappointed, by Sun-Times Michael Loria

In D.C.: Mayor Brandon Johnson seeks $1B from federal government to address migrant and other issues, by ABC 7s Craig Wall

Sun-Times Lynn Sweet has the list of everyone Johnson met.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The De La Cruz family from Darien is donating this years Chicago holiday tree a 45-foot Colorado Blue Spruce that will be placed at Michigan and Washington in Millennium Park. The annual Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony is on Nov. 17.

Key city panel votes to mandate 10 days of paid leave over opposition from major business groups, by Tribunes A.D. Quig

Ex-Chicago top cop Fred Waller staying on at CPD as a deputy director with combined annual pay and pension reaching $333,323, by WBEZs Chip Mitchell

Six plays written by teens take a hard look at gun violence a year before the elections, by WBEZs Courtney Kueppers

Ex-Ald. Ed Burke used campaign funds to pay six-figure consulting fees to his co-defendant: Lawyers for Peter Andrews Jr., a key player for years in the ex-aldermans 14th Ward Democratic organization, said money from Burkes political funds was used by Andrews to cover his legal fees, by Tribunes Ray Long, Jason Meisner and Megan Crepeau.

Common sense doesnt explain City Council, so judge to allow Chicago civics lesson for Burke jurors: Political science professor Constance Mixon, whos been quoted in POLITICOs Illinois Playbook, will testify about how government works, by Sun-Times Jon Seidel and WBEZs Mariah Woelfel.

What jurors in three recent corruption trials think about serving, by Sun-Times Jon Seidel

In Riverdale: Mayor Lawrence Jackson charged with lying about secret funding for his trucking firm from clout-heavy waste company, by Tribunes Jason Meisner

A message from the Save My Scholarship Coalition:

Calumet City officials ticket Daily Southtown reporter for hampering city employees with questions: Despite all FOIA requests being filled, Hank Sanders continues to contact city departments and city employees via phone and email, states the violation notice mentioning Mayor Thadeeus Jones. Tribunes Gregory Royal Pratt reports.

Sean Tenner, the 46th Ward Democratic committeeperson, is in Nouakchott, Mauritania, with the Abolition Institute, a non-profit that works to fight slavery in that country. Tenner and other supporters are meeting with slavery survivors, the Mauritanian government, anti-slavery groups and U.S. Ambassador to Mauritania Cynthia Kierscht, a Chicago native. On the trip: State Reps. La Shawn Ford and Sonya Harper, Cook County Commissioner Monica Gordon, Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins and Maywood Mayor Nathaniel Booker.

State Rep. Carol Ammons will receive the inaugural RACES Community Builder Award from the Rape Advocacy, Counseling, & Education Services nonprofit during its annual fundraiser Nov. 14. Shes being recognized for supporting legislation to expand services for victims of sexual violence.

Art collectors Marilyn and Larry Fields have donated 79 objects to the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) Chicago, via the Art Newspaper

DUELING LUNCHES: Businesswoman Desiree Rogers (another Obama alum) headlined Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkles annual Womens Luncheon, a fundraiser for Preckwinkles political operation. In the room: Former Sen. Carol Moseley Braun, Illinois Supreme Court Justice Joy Cunningham, Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough and political consultant Kathy Posner.

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton won the trailblazer award at the annual Women at the Forefront event benefiting City Clerk Anna Valencias political committee. Also honored: Chicago Federation of Labors Izzy Dobbel and political consultant Allison Schraub. In the room: Ald. Ruth Cruz, Committeewoman Lucy Moog, MWRD Commissioners Daniel Pogo Pogorzelski and Precious Brady-Davis, and Jessica Genova from the Illinois Democratic Party.

We asked how youre just like yourself as a kid?

Fritz Kaegi, the Cook County Assessor: As this picture of me from 4th grade shows, Im still a dedicated Sox fan. I dont have enough hair today to pull off the mother-provided haircut, however.

Matthew Beaudet: I still live in the neighborhood I grew up in and go out with friends from kindergarten. It keeps me humble and grounded.

LaTreshia Hamilton: I am still ambitious. I have dreams, career aspirations and goals that I set for myself.

Tammy Hansen: I find it almost impossible to not stomp through puddles, but sometimes the urge wins.

Charles Keller: I still love competition.

Marilynn Miller: Im independent, refusing to kowtow to anyone, no matter who. My theme song is Sinatras My Way.

Gail Morse: Still wearing Vans tennis shoes and still want to be out playing with friends.

Ed Mullen: Ive always pushed the envelope and tilted at windmills.

Andy Shaw: Still the preternaturally enthusiastic, energetic, big mouth know-it-all.

Timothy Thomas Jr. Ive always kept a moral compass, including no smoking, drinking, gambling or drugs.

Patricia Ann Watson: I still see and welcome new kids and fight schoolyard/neighborhood bullies.

Whats the food item you eat almost every day? Email [emailprotected]

House GOP passes Israel aid bill, by POLITICOs Katherine Tully-McManus

Biden weighs border deal altering asylum law for Ukraine aid, by POLITICOs Myah Ward and Ursula Perano

An anti-Trump group produced four ads attacking his legal troubles. They backfired, by POLITICOs Alex Isenstadt

Pelosi launches an all-out attack against No Labels, by POLITICOs Brittany Gibson and your Playbook host

A message from the Save My Scholarship Coalition:

Voters are very clear: They support the Tax Credit Scholarship Program by an overwhelming margin of more than 2:1. Whats at stake is the best-fit education of thousands of low-income students who receive a Tax Credit Scholarship or are waiting for one. Over half of the recipients are Black or Brown, and all the recipients qualify based on financial need. We cannot fail these children and their families. The Illinois General Assembly needs to extend the Invest in Kids Act Tax Credit Scholarship Program during this fall veto session. In addition to the 9,500 students who currently receive the scholarships, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist hoping to receive the same opportunities as some of their peers. This commitment is an investment in poverty reduction and economic acceleration, so lawmakers should do the right thing: Extend the Tax Credit Scholarship Program.

THURSDAYs ANSWER: Congrats to Kristin DiCenso for correctly answering that the Cubs 2016 victory celebration drew the biggest crowd at Grant Park. The full parade and rally attendance was estimated at 5 million. FWIW, reports have the popes visit in 1979 at 1.5 million. Soprano Lily Pons drew 300,000 in 1939. And former President Barack Obamas Nov. 4, 2008, victory speech drew 240,000.

TODAYs QUESTION: Whos the Obama administration policing expert who also was honored by Springfield High School with belated valedictorian honors? Email [emailprotected]

Today: Biden campaign Principal Campaign Manager Quentin Fulks, Stomping Ground Strategies partner Isabelle Dienstag, political consultant Kathy Posner, Rabbi emeritus Paul Caplan and Wall Street Journal Senior Publishing Editor Lisa Donovan.

Saturday: Former state Sen. Sam McCann, political consultant Michael Fontneau, Data Reporting Lab founder Darnell Little, National Equity Fund CEO Matthew Reilein, Gemini Builds It CEO Courtney Wright and Tribune investigations editor Kaarin Tisue.

Sunday: Law Bulletin Editor Andrea Hanis, Young Invincibles Midwest Regional Director Lily Rocha, attorney Meryl Holt Silverman and Crains Assistant Managing Editor Cassandra West.

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Link:
Obama team holds 15-year reunion - POLITICO - POLITICO

Obama on UAW strike: Time to do right by workers that keep companies on their feet – The Hill

Former President Obama backed the United Auto Workers strike on Saturday, telling automakers that it’s time to “do right” by workers.

“Fourteen years ago, when the big three automakers were struggling to stay afloat, my administration and the American people stepped in to support them,” Obama said on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. “So did the auto workers in the UAW who sacrificed pay and benefits to help get the companies back on their feet.” 

“Now that our carmakers are enjoying robust profits, it’s time to do right by those same workers so the industry can emerge more united and competitive than ever,” he added.

UAW began a strike against the “Big Three” automakers — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis — early Friday morning, a first in the union’s history, after negotiations failed before reaching the end of the workers’ contracts. The union is demanding increased wages, shorter work weeks and better retirement benefits.

Profits at the Big Three firms increased by 92 percent in the last decade and CEO pay increased by 40 percent in the same period, according to an analysis from the Economic Policy Institute.

“We are committed to winning an agreement with the Big Three that reflects the incredible sacrifice and contributions UAW members have made to these companies,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in an address Thursday.

In late 2008, weeks after Obama’s first election, the Bush administration announced a nearly $18 billion bailout for major automakers wrecked by the recession. Congress later invested about $80 billion of federal funds into Detroit automakers during the Obama administration, losing about $11 billion on its GM investment alone by the time the government sold the shares in 2013.

The Biden administration has also backed the UAW strike and President Biden encouraged automakers to return to the bargaining table with an increased offer on Friday.

“I believe they should go further… Record corporate profits, which they have, should be shared by record contracts for the UAW,” Biden said.

Strikes are limited to a small number of specific plants chosen by union leadership hours before they begin. The pop-up strike tactic is meant to “keep the companies guessing,” Fain said.

The rest is here:
Obama on UAW strike: Time to do right by workers that keep companies on their feet - The Hill

Former Obama White House Aide Alejandra Campoverdi Releases New Memoir – PEOPLE

When Alejandra Campoverdi was 13-years-old, her debut play was praised by Angela Bassett.

Campoverdi, who is now known for her extensive roles in politics and women's health advocacy, wrote the script as part of the arts nonprofit program The Virginia Project. On the show's opening night, the Academy Award-winning Bassett, who had just filmed Whats Love Got to Do with It, was in the community center audience.

Bassett, who was friends with the actress who starred in the play, was struck by its relatability. Campoverdi writes that she recalls Bassett approaching her to say, "I want you to know how much I personally related to what you wrote. Thank you for your courage and honesty."

[That experience] showed me that vulnerability and sharing and creativity could actually be connective tissue between individuals, Campoverdi tells PEOPLE. So that not only helped kick off my love of writing, but it also changed the way that I live my life.

That defining moment is just one included in Campoverdis memoir, First Gen, out now from Grand Central Publishing. The author details the ups and downs of her life and career, which encapsulates everything from acting to modeling to serving as a special assistant during the Obama administration, and how she navigated it all as a first-generation Mexican-American.

Courtesy of Grand Central Publishing

I feel like I grew into this book, Campoverdi says. I couldn't have written this book five years ago. A lot of it had to do with my own healing journey and my own excavating of these wounds.

Campoverdi was raised in Los Angeles by her single mother, grandparents and aunts. She details her familys struggles over the years with financial insecurity, domestic abuse and loss, and how she felt pressure to keep the peace from a young age. These feelings of anxiety would follow her into adulthood as a First and Only, a term that she uses to describe first-generation individuals and others who are breaking barriers within their communities.

There's millions of us, she says. So let's start talking to each other in a real way.

Campoverdi does, and with candor. While she took on ahandful of small acting gigs, including the 2005 Keanu Reeves flick Constantine, and waited tables in high-end L.A. restaurants, Campoverdi also faced immense imposter syndrome amongst her University of Southern California classmates. She was accepted into Harvards Kennedy School of Government for graduate school, but instead of giving an immediate, resounding "yes," had to seriously consider the financial and emotional risks of moving cross-country and leaving her family.

Pete Souza, Chief Official White House Photographer

As much as First Gen is a memoir, it is also a resource for other First and Onlys. Campoverdi isnt afraid to share the emotional toll of being a groundbreaker, as well as the nuances of the Latino and immigrant experience. She breaks down her story into categories, like the Bicultural Balancing Act, where one must navigate multiple cultures at once, and Blindfolded Cliff Jumping, which refers to the feeling of navigating new fields without any previous connections.

I had embarked on my career really trying to find a way to merge my love of my culture and what that identity meant to me with my passion and the issues that were important to me, Campoverdi says. Her work, which had included serving as the White Houses first Deputy Director of Hispanic Media, and running for Californias 34th Congressional District in 2017, doesnt come without challenges.

I still face all these pieces, Campoverdi says. The breakaway guilt, all of this, is still very active. And this book is how I'm also dealing with it in real time.

The author is only furthering her advocacy for her fellow First and Onlys. Campoverdi, who has benefited from therapy, provides pages of mental health resources in the book. She also launched the First Gen Fellowship, which will award ten grants to first-generation college students, per its website.

Alejandra Campoverdi

Never miss a story sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.

More than anything, Campoverdi hopes that her readers feel seen and understand they are not alone. One of her own personal reckonings with this occurred when she introduced her mother and sister to President Obama during her time at the White House; an experience that Campoverdi says was bigger than all of them.

It was one of the moments that you can see all of the sacrifices and the debt and the hardship and the isolation and the loneliness and everything come together, she says. And you understand that your story and your experience as someone who's first-gen is so much bigger than who you are.

First Gen is now available wherever books are sold.

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Former Obama White House Aide Alejandra Campoverdi Releases New Memoir - PEOPLE

‘Time Of Essence’: 2010s Obama Administration, Social Justice, And … – Essence

Entering the 2010s was yet another remarkable decade for ESSENCE. Weve elected the nations first Black president, and were at the forefront of covering what Black excellence truly is. The new decade meant hope for a better tomorrow, with Barack and Michelle Obama leading the charge.

In March 2010, the magazine placed the Obamas on the cover of the magazine. At this point, President Barack Obama had already served two years in office, during which he had embarked on a transformative journey for the nation. His historic election as the first African American president in 2008 had resonated deeply with the American public, and his policies and actions during those initial years were marked by a commitment to positive change. Notably, the passage of the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, was among his significant achievements during this period. ESSENCEs decision to spotlight the Obama family in 2010 was a testament to the enduring impact of his presidency and the hopeful spirit he had brought to the nation, particularly for African Americans who saw him as a symbol of progress and possibility.

In August of the following year, the spotlight in Hollywood shone brightly on the incomparable Viola Davis. ESSENCE magazines decision to feature her on their cover during this pivotal moment was both timely and profound. Viola Davis had already established herself as a formidable talent, captivating audiences with her exceptional performances on stage and screen. Her appearance on the cover underscored her status as a rising star and a symbol of empowerment for the Black community and beyond. Furthermore, this feature aligned perfectly with the release of The Help, a critically acclaimed film in which Viola Davis delivered a breathtaking performance as Aibileen Clark, a character that resonated deeply with viewers and earned her deserved acclaim. In this way, Viola Daviss ESSENCE cover was not just a celebration of her remarkable career but also a testament to the power of storytelling in addressing important societal issues, particularly those related to race and social justice.

Fast-forwarding to July 2014, ESSENCE magazine released a highly anticipated collectors issue that had a special and unique appeal to both its female and male readership. This particular issue was dedicated to the cast of Think Like A Man, a film adaptation of Steve Harveys popular book, and it celebrated entertainment, romance, and humor in a big way. The decision to create dual covers for this issue was a clever and strategic move, showcasing the films ensemble cast and how big of a cultural moment the film was.

The ladies cover featured some of the most talented and beloved actresses in Hollywood, including Megan Good, Taraji P. Henson, Gabrielle Union, Lala Anthony, and Regina Hall. These women were celebrated not only for their beauty but also for their incredible acting skills and contributions to the entertainment industry. Their presence on the cover reinforced ESSENCEs commitment to showcasing strong and accomplished Black women in the world of entertainment.

On the flip side, the mens cover featured a lineup of charismatic and accomplished actors, including Kevin Hart, Michael Ealy, Terrance J, Romany Malco, and Will Packer. These men were not only celebrated for their on-screen charisma but also for their involvement in bringing the film to life. Kevin Hart, in particular, was a comedic powerhouse and a rising star in the comedy world, and his presence on the cover added an element of humor and relatability to the issue.

This ESSENCE collectors issue was a reflection of the magazines ability to capture the essence (pun intended) of cultural moments in the African American community and the broader world of entertainment. By featuring dual covers with the talented and charismatic cast of Think Like A Man, ESSENCE recognized and celebrated the films significance as a cultural touchstone, as well as the star power of its ensemble cast. It demonstrated the magazines commitment to showcasing Black excellence in the entertainment industry and its ability to resonate with both female and male readers.

Three years later, in 2017, ESSENCE magazine featured the multi-talented and highly decorated singer-songwriter, Kandi Burruss-Tucker, on its cover. Burruss-Tucker had already carved a niche for herself in the music industry as a member of the popular girl group Xscape and as a prolific songwriter. However, her appearance on the cover of ESSENCE marked a pivotal moment in her career and personal life.

Burruss-Tucker was widely recognized for her appearances on The Real Housewives of Atlanta, a reality TV show that showcased the lives and aspirations of affluent women in Atlanta. Her time on the show has allowed viewers to witness her dynamic personality, business acumen, and her ability to balance multiple roles and responsibilities. Moreover, the year prior, she had opened her first family restaurant, Old Lady Gang in 2016.

The timing of this feature was even sweeter as it coincided with talks of the highly anticipated Xscape reunion. The news of their potential reunion generated considerable excitement and nostalgia among fans.

In 2018, as the end of the decade approached, ESSENCE magazine created a poignant full-circle moment by featuring the iconic former First Lady of the United States, Michelle Obama, on its cover, this time in a solo spotlight. Although the Obama administration had concluded two years earlier, the impact of the first family continued to resonate deeply with the American public, and their mission to inspire hope in the nation remained undeterred even under a new president. Michelle Obamas presence on the cover symbolized not only her enduring influence but also her commitment to making a positive difference in the world.

In this feature, Michelle Obama opened up about her experiences during her time in the White House, providing readers with an intimate glimpse into her life as the First Lady. Her candid insights and reflections offered a unique perspective on the responsibilities, challenges, and triumphs associated with that high-profile role. Moreover, Michelle Obama shared wisdom about what it takes to find ones own Barack, emphasizing the importance of partnership, mutual support, and shared values in a successful and fulfilling relationship.

What made this ESSENCE cover even more remarkable was the exclusive first look at her newly released book at the time, Becoming. The book, a deeply personal memoir, delved into Michelle Obamas life journey, her experiences in the White House, and her thoughts on identity, family, and leadership. Becoming would go on to become a literary sensation, resonating with readers around the world and inspiring countless individuals to pursue their dreams and make a positive impact on their communities.

ESSENCEs decision to feature Michelle Obama once again on its cover in 2018 encapsulated her role as a source of inspiration and empowerment for women and individuals of all backgrounds, reaffirming ESSENCEs commitment to showcasing influential and trailblazing figures within the African American community and beyond.

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'Time Of Essence': 2010s Obama Administration, Social Justice, And ... - Essence