Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Here Comes Obama – The Atlantic

Read: When Obama talked Biden out of running for president

Everyones been wondering how you campaign in a pandemic, and were trying to show them how, says Eric Schultz, a senior adviser to the former president.

Obama will spend much of the next few weeks texting, tweeting, and recording web videos. Hes agreed to a few interviews with podcast hosts he can count on to let him say what he wants: One with his former campaign manager David Plouffe, and another on Pod Save America, whose hosts met while working for him. A very important question after the election, even if it goes well with Joe Biden, is whether you start seeing the Republican Party restore some sense of Here are norms that we cant breach, because [Trumps] breached all of them, and they have not said to him, This is too far, Obama told the Pod Save America hosts yesterday.

Obama has raised more money for the Biden campaign via text and emails with his name on them than anyone other than Biden and Harris themselves; a text of his from late September is one of the top 10 of all time for money raised. Sitting at his table at home, he has appeared at several fundraisers for the Biden campaign, for House Democrats, and for All on the Line, the redistricting group that he helped found and that merged with his Organizing for Action group two years ago.

Over the summer, Obama advised LeBron James as the NBA star was figuring out how to get more involved in politics. Obama has stayed involved with Jamess group, More Than a Votea surprise appearance in the virtual fan section for Game 1 of the NBA Finals, alongside past Lakers stars and poll workers, led to a tripling of the number of volunteers who signed up as poll workers. Hes a figure of cultural significance now, not just political significance, says Addisu Demissie, the groups executive director, explaining why he thinks Obama was able to help in a way that other politicians couldnt.

This is the first election cycle in 20 years that Obama hasnt been out on the trail. As much as he enjoys not having to interrupt his schedule, he misses the crowds cheering for him. He misses whipping people up in person, especially against Trump, whom he despises so deeply. But he did draw 120,826 viewers to the grassroots fundraiser he appeared at in June for Biden, raising $11 million in small donationsway more people, and probably more money, than he could have raised at a single live event.

Obama has also continued to make endorsements, including many for down-ballot racesand after years of Democrats distancing themselves from him when he was in the White House, the number of swing-district candidates now chasing his public support has gratified him. Hes thrown his weight around a little, endorsing Reverend Raphael Warnock in one of this years Georgia Senate elections. That earned Obama a brushback from another Democratic candidate, Matt Lieberman, who tweeted at Warnock, Congrats on endorsement from 44 who has endorsed every DC-approved Senate candidate.

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Here Comes Obama - The Atlantic

I photographed Obama and Reagan. Here’s why Trump’s White House is a national disgrace. – NBC News

The previous day at the White House the day after the election the shock was palpable throughout the building. Obama often used the phrase zig zag to describe the ups and downs of our countrys existence. In my head, I heard the lyrics of a Bruce Springsteen song, one step up and two steps back, as I walked into the West Wing that morning.

Watch "The Way I See It," a new documentary co-presented by Focus Features and MSNBC Films, on MSNBC tonight at 10:00 p.m. ET.

Being one of the older members of the staff, I had watched the country go through many challenging times. The assassination of John Kennedy in 1963, the civil rights riots in the 1960s, the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy in 1968, the resignation of Richard Nixon in 1974 and the 9/11 attacks, to name a few. As difficult as those times were, our country did eventually recover from all of them.

I told myself that the Trump election was another such episode a zag, two steps back or maybe a few more. Yet there was an unsettling feeling in the pit of my stomach as I sat in my cubby hole office early that morning after the election. I noticed an open door and light across the hall chief speechwriter Cody Keenans office. I poked my head in.

Cody wasnt there but his young assistant a writer in her own right was seated at her desk.

You doing OK? I asked.

She looked up at me and, while nodding yes, began to cry. I reached out to give her a hug, and the tears flowed onto my suit jacket. Later, I noticed mascara stains on my lapel.

That scene repeated itself throughout the day. I tried my best to buck people up. Itll be OK, I repeated. Yet I wondered myself how much damage a Trump presidency could do, and how long it would eventually take for the country to recover.

Trump eventually arrived at the White House and met with the Obamas in the Diplomatic Reception Room. With him was Melania, Jared Kushner, Hope Hicks and a handful of others. President Obama escorted Trump along the colonnade to the Oval Office. Michelle Obama escorted Melania upstairs to the residence.

In the Oval Office, Obama showed Trump the private study and private dining room that are part of the Oval suite. As they were about to sit down for their private meeting, Obama said to Trump, this is my White House photographer Pete Souza.

I reached out to shake his hand and said, Congratulations, sir. I was following the presidents lead to be respectful.

Youre famous, Trump said back to me. Which puzzled me so much that I just let his reply hang in the air.

Thinking about that comment almost four years later, I still think it was such an odd thing for him to say. First, I wasnt really that well known outside the building (yes, thats changed a bit in the past few years). So how could he possibly know who I was? But more telling, why would the next president of the United States choose those words, and only those words, upon me congratulating him?

But watching the reality show nature of his presidency the last four years, maybe it makes perfect sense. I guess he thought I had good ratings.

Many people are aware that I began throwing shade at Trump and his administration in the early days after his inauguration. What began as subtle and humorous jabs has morphed into much more direct commentary, bolstered mostly by my Obama photographs as a comparison.

There are some who believe that I, as a former photojournalist and a former official White House photographer, should keep my mouth shut and not criticize the current president.

I disagree.

I worked for arguably the most iconic Republican president of my generation (yes, I worked as an official photographer for Reagan) and for arguably the most iconic Democratic president of my generation. So I feel I have a unique vantage point, having observed two presidents from two different political parties as an insider.

The presidency deserves someone who is competent and honest. Someone who has empathy and compassion. Someone who upholds the dignity, and shows respect to, the office. Someone who has character and knows ultimately the presidency isnt about him (or someday her), but about us.

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I photographed Obama and Reagan. Here's why Trump's White House is a national disgrace. - NBC News

Obama opened up about the personal qualities that make Joe Biden such an exceptional leader – GOOD Magazine

In Joe Biden's acceptance speech for the Democratic nomination, he said "Character is on the ballot. Compassion is on the ballot," adding "the choice could not be more clear."

While that could have come off as a political clich, in 2020 it's true. In fact, one could argue that the biggest issue in the election isn't the pandemic, economy, or racial justice, but that Americans want a leader with character.

They want someone who has compassion for those who are hurting right now and they aren't getting it from the current president.

Nothing better exemplifies Trump's callousness towards the COVID-19 pandemic than when a reporter pressed him on the fact that 1,000 Americans are dying every day from the disease he replied, "It is what it is."

Trump on 1,000 Americans a day dying from COVID-19: 'It is what it is' http://www.youtube.com

Earlier this month, a poll by Newsweek found Biden was rated much higher for compassion than his opponent, 67% to Trump's 34%. He is also seen as a better role model, 54% to 28%.

Throughout the campaign, people have touted Biden's compassion for others as his greatest selling point. During the Democratic National Convention, there were countless stories of how Biden gives his phone number out to everyday Americans.

It's often said that his natural empathy stems from the tragic loss of his wife and daughter when he was 29 and his son at 72.

via Matt Johnson / Twitter

One person who knows Biden's character more than just about anyone is president Barack Obama who worked with Biden for over eight years in the White House and on the campaign trail.

Obama shared his thoughts on Biden's natural empathy on the Pod Save America podcast released on October 14. He later shared a clip of his appearance on Instagram.

"I take my time in rope lines," Obama said, referring to campaign meet and greets. "And if [Biden] and I were campaigning, you know, I would have been really giving everybody a lot of attention and I'd be at the end of the rope."

"I look back, he was a third of the way through when he was still, you know, telling a story or listening to somebody. And that heart is who he is," he added.

"A lot of times when you're thinking about the presidency, it's great to look at policy, Obama said, "but a lot of it is what's their basic character?

"Are they people who instinctively care about the underdog? Are they people who are able to see the world through somebody else's eyes and stand in their shoes? Are they are they people who are instinctively generous in spirit?" Obama continued. "Right. And that is who Joe is."

The day after Obama's appearance on Pod Save America, Biden provided a perfect example of his character. After a live presidential town hall even on ABC, Biden stuck around and answered all the questions from audience members he couldn't get to long after the cameras were off.

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Obama opened up about the personal qualities that make Joe Biden such an exceptional leader - GOOD Magazine

On a podcast with Barack Obama and in a letter co-signed by "The Squad," fresh signs of the Democratic Party fight to come – CBS News

If Joe Biden wins the presidency, his biggest challenge in Washington might not be finding cooperation with Republicans it could be satisfying the demands of members of his own party.

Twice in recent days, reminders of the coming clash between moderate or establishment Democrats and the party's younger, more assertive left wing sprung into public view. The warning shots came as the Democratic diaspora has mostly set aside significant disagreements left unsettled by the presidential primary season to focus on the more urgent task of wrestling the White House away from President Trump.

First, former President Barack Obama gave an interview to the popular "Pod Save America" and reminded the podcast's mostly liberal audience that the progressive change many of them seek only happens if the Democratic Party controls all levers of executive and legislative power and that the party has to be open to compromise.

"We have to accommodate for the fact that they're going to be some regional differences and that's OK. That's part of the big tent and that's part of the process that we move forward," the former president said of his party.

But on Friday, a cohort of liberal lawmakers and like-minded interest groups and labor unions many of whom once openly clashed with Mr. Obama over domestic and foreign policy sent a letter to Senate leaders signaling an absolutist stance on a key element of any new president's early months: Filling top government positions.

In the letter, the Democratic House lawmakers called on senators in both parties to oppose confirming "any nominee to an executive branch position who is currently or has been a lobbyist for any corporate client or c-suite officer for a private corporation, in this or any future administration."

Noting that both Democratic and Republican presidents have relied on corporate veterans to serve at the top levels of government, the progressives said, "we should stop trying to make unsupportable distinctions between which corporate affiliations are acceptable for government service and which are not. We should be honest about the fact that such distinctions are nothing more than partisanship dressed up in transparently false claims of necessity."

The letter was signed by long-serving members of the House Democratic Caucus's liberal wing Representatives Raul Grijalva, of Arizona; Jim McGovern, of Massachusetts; Barbara Lee, of California and Nydia Velasquez, of New York. But co-signers also included three members of "The Squad" Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of New York; Rashida Tlaib, of Michigan; Ayanna Pressley, of Massachusetts and other rising liberal stars, Representatives Pramila Jayapal, of Washington and Katie Porter, of California.

That kind of absolutist stance is exactly the kind of move Mr. Obama warned against this week.

In the podcast interview, Mr. Obama's former speechwriter Jon Favreau asked, "What's your advice to those people who want to see not only a more progressive Democratic Party, but more progressive policies enacted in Washington?"

"Look, I think that number one win first, right? I think everybody's kind of moved into that mindset," Mr. Obama said. "You know, let's get through the next three weeks and then the next three months and then let's figure out what our internal debates are going to be."

"It is very important for progressives to continue to press their agenda, because there are going to be other forces that are pressing on the White House from the other direction," he added.

But the former president also urged restraint: "The caution I always have for progressives is making sure that as you push for the most you could get, that at a certain point you say: 'All right. You know what? Let's get this done and then let's then move on to fight another day.'"

He recalled disagreements with Democrats over passage of the Affordable Care Act, noting that it required a 60-vote supermajority in a divided Senate in order to pass.

When moderate members of the Senate Democratic caucus including then-Senators Joseph Lieberman, independent of Connecticut, and Ben Nelson, a Nebraska Democrat refused to support a public option in the comprehensive health-care bill, he had to back off. And even though the Dodd-Frank bank reforms passed during his administration didn't entirely eliminate Wall Street greed and malfeasance, he said the legislation put in place "guardrails" that kept the entire financial system from falling into financial shock.

"So progressives, if you want progressive legislation, get out there and keep working after the president is elected," he said.

Several progressive groups are doing just that, especially some that openly fought the idea of a Biden presidency.

In Iowa, former consultants to independent Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders are now drawing from their successful Iowa caucus playbook to whip up support for Biden.

America's Progressive Promise PAC, led by former Sanders senior aides Jeff Weaver and Chuck Rocha, and Nuestro PAC, an outfit targeting Latino liberal voters and established by Rocha, are teaming up to spend about $500,000 to target Iowa's Latino voters with political mail and digital ads already airing in other more Latino-dominated states. The Sanders presidential campaign had spent millions of dollars targeting roughly 68,000 Latino registered voters in the state a small, but significant bloc that helped Sanders eke out a popular vote win in the caucus.

The digital ad targeting Iowa Latinos stars young former supporters of Sanders imploring fellow Democrats to vote for Biden. Several young people in the ad say, "I was for Bernie. But now, we're all for Joe Biden. Because Biden's endorsed by Bernie Sanders." They note that Biden has a plan to fight student debt and supports significant changes in climate change policy.

Another pro-Sanders group, Justice Democrats, also released a digital ad this week with a similar message: Biden isn't perfect, but he isn't Trump.

An exhausted-looking mother seated in her backyard as her young child runs around tells the camera, "For six months, everything is COVID-this and COVID-that. I lost my fing job because we're all trying to stay at home to get this under control. And our president does what? Are you fing kidding me? Look, maybe you don't [like?] the other guy running for president. I get it I don't like anyone right now. But could you do me a favor? Take ten minutes this November and fing vote. Can you do that for me?"

If this targeted outreach to liberal voters buoys Biden and helps him eke out wins in competitive battleground states like Arizona, Iowa and Nevada, progressives are going to expect something in return. It seems the push to ban corporate leaders from serving in government is just the start.

"The revolving door needs to stop, not just change direction every few years," the progressives wrote.

Their letter wasn't addressed directly to Biden or his White House transition team, which is beginning to lay the groundwork, mostly virtually, for a White House transition that could be delayed by prolonged ballot counts and legal challenges in several states, should he win the presidency.

Late Friday after this piece first published, a transition office spokesman signaled that the kind of corporate lobbyists decried by the progressive lawmakers could conceivably serve on the Biden transition team.

A transition ethics code announced September 30 states that, "Regardless of whether a team member is a registered lobbyist, transition team members cannot work on matters for which they conducted lobbying activity in the last 12 months or anticipate conducting lobbying activity for the 12 months after transition without approval of the General Counsel."

But what about in a Biden administration? That isn't entirely clear. A statement from the transition spokesman only says that if they win, a "diverse and experienced team" would help Biden and Senator Kamala Harris "put America on a path to recovery from the pandemic."

"We can do this important work while demonstrating that public servants serve all Americans," the statement says, "not themselves or special interests."

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On a podcast with Barack Obama and in a letter co-signed by "The Squad," fresh signs of the Democratic Party fight to come - CBS News

Biden town hall questioner worked as speechwriter in Obama administration: report | TheHill – The Hill

A participantinThursday night's ABC News town hallwith Democratic nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenConservatives seize on New York Post story to push Section 230 reform Trump wishes Harris 'the best' after aide tests positive for COVID-19 Pennsylvania rejects 372K mail-in ballot applications following primary confusion: report MORE previously worked as a speechwriter in the Obama administration, but was only identified during the televised event as someone who works in "communications," Fox News reported Friday.

The town hall from Philadelphia moderated by George StephanopoulosGeorge Robert StephanopoulosCensoring the Biden story: How social media becomes state media Biden's town hall viewership surpasses Trump's The choice: It's competence vs. chaos MORE included a question from Nathan Osburn, who reportedly worked in the Office of Public Affairs and was director of speechwriting for members of President Obama's Cabinet.

The Twitter bio for a Nathan Osburn says he's a former Cabinet speechwriter.

When reached for comment, an ABC spokesperson told The Hill that Stephanopoulos disclosed the mix of voters at the top of the program when speaking to Biden.

"They're a group of -- some are voting for you, some have said they're voting for President TrumpDonald John TrumpLatest Mnuchin-Pelosi call produces 'encouraging news on testing' for stimulus package China warns it will detain American nationals following DOJ prosecution of Chinese scholars: report Musician John Fogerty issues cease and desist over Trump use of 'Fortunate Son' MORE, some are still undecided, and we're going to try to take questions from as many as we can tonight,"Stephanopoulos said.

When Osburn was selected to ask a question of Biden, his profession was only shown as "communications." He was introduced by Stephanopoulos only as a "Philadelphia Democrat."

Osburn's question regarded President Trump's Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney BarrettAmy Coney BarrettWashington flooded with Women's March protesters ahead of Barrett confirmation vote Appeals court upholds Kentucky abortion law requiring clinics to have transfer agreements with hospitals Liberals should embrace Trump's Supreme Court nominee MORE "being pushed through at the last minute" despite millions already voting and what Osburn argued was "the erosion of rights of LBGTQ Americans."

"Our country's first Supreme Court gave its first ruling just two blocks from here from 1791 to 1800 and it's become more polarized since then. Merrick GarlandMerrick Brian GarlandBiden keeps both sides guessing on court packing Biden town hall questioner worked as speechwriter in Obama administration: report Trump rebukes Collins amid difficult reelection fight MORE didn't get a hearing for all of 2016 and Amy Coney Barrett's being pushed through at the last minute even though millions have already voted," Osburn said.

"So what do you think about ideas from people like Pete ButtigiegPete ButtigiegSunday shows preview: Coronavirus cases surge in the Midwest; Trump hits campaign trail after COVID-19 Biden town hall questioner worked as speechwriter in Obama administration: report Cedric Richmond's next move: 'Sky's the limit' if Biden wins MORE and others to put in place safeguards that will help insure more long-term balance and stability? And what do you say to LBGTQ Americans and others who are very worried right now about erosions of their rights and our democracy as a whole?"

During his reply, Biden said he would let voters know what his stance was on expanding the Supreme Court before Election Day.

"Don't voters have a right to know where you stand?" Stephanopoulos asked.

"They do have a right to know where I stand. And they will have a right to know where I stand before they vote," Biden replied.

Updated at 2:43 p.m.

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Biden town hall questioner worked as speechwriter in Obama administration: report | TheHill - The Hill