Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

What Obama Is Whispering to Biden – New York Magazine

Biden stands with Obama onstage during a campaign fundraiser in Los Angeles earlier this month. Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

Joe Biden figured it was a good time to catch up with his old boss. He knew Barack Obama was about to leave gray Washington for his annual Hawaiian Christmas vacation, so he invited him for lunch last December at the White House. It wasnt just a holiday get-together. For months, Bidens poll numbers had been trending in the wrong direction and his party had been growing uncomfortably anxious about him as the election year approached. His day job was not much easier, as Israels war in Gaza intensified and Russias war in Ukraine dragged on. Biden knew Obama had been watching his situation, that hed started digging into the state of the campaign a bit, and that hed be willing to offer some thoughts.

Back when they were in office together, Obama would lead their regular lunches and use the time to discuss the policy and political topics that were on his mind that week and sometimes family too. These days, they talk less frequently, and Biden leads the conversations when they do, using Obama as a trusted and experienced source of advice. As they sat far from prying eyes in the White House, the conversation naturally turned to the coming election. When Biden brought up 2024, Obama already knew what he wanted to say. His primary objective was to remind Biden how their own reelection campaign had been organized in D.C., in its Chicago headquarters, and in the battleground states. It was all fairly unsurprising by the standards of a secret meal shared by presidents.

Then the trouble started. Their lunches tend to be unannounced to anyone but need-to-know-level aides, and none sit in when Biden and Obama chat. In Washington, that means that rumors about their conversations circulate faster than reliable word about what theyve actually discussed especially when things arent going well politically. For years now, many Washington Democrats have been contradictorily convinced that there must be a growing distance between the pair and that Obama must possess some secret plan to help his old partner and they are in constant search of evidence for both. An agitated game of telephone took off among some of these semi-plugged-in liberals around the end of last year, following not just that one White House meeting but also a handful of conversations between Obama and Biden advisers. As the rumor mill had it, Obama was especially unnerved about the race, which Biden was losing, if swing-state polls were to be believed. Not only that, the 44th president had supposedly urged the 46th to install a trusted senior adviser or two at his campaign headquarters in Wilmington someone like Obamas 2008 campaign manager David Plouffe rather than keeping his inner circle intact in Washington. As the whispers circulated, so did the confusion: Obamas freaking out? And he wants Biden to hire Plouffe to fix the campaign?

This was off the mark, according to a range of high-ranking Democrats familiar with both presidents thinking at the time and in the months since. Obama did, in fact, think Biden should dispatch at least one trusted White House staffer to the campaigns Delaware HQ, mirroring how Obama had split his own political brain trust between Chicago and Washington in 2012. Plouffe had stayed in D.C. when David Axelrod left the White House for Chicago. And just weeks after the presidents met, Biden planted two of his top White House counselors, Mike Donilon and Jen OMalley Dillon, in Wilmington to help run the campaign.

Though his anxiety about the election is real, in the words of one Obama friend, the ex-presidents concerns sounded a lot like those of other top Democrats, according to others whove spoken with him. Those who are in regular touch with Obama say these nerves are not a reflection of any particular angst about Biden or his team but of the broader reality: The country is closely divided, the media landscape is fractured, and Donald Trump may very well win. Obama has always acknowledged to friends and worried supporters in search of reassurance that the race is likely to be a nail-biter. Yet he has remained careful about not evincing any specific concern or complacency about the campaign, aware that reports about his feelings are unlikely to help the Democratic cause.

None of which is to say hes exactly holding back. Obama is increasingly involved in Bidens campaign, but his role looks different from what it was in 2020, as does their relationship which has always been far more complicated than understood by much of the public and many Democrats. Largely because of their shared time in office, Biden and Obama remain as close as any two occupants of the Oval Office have been, yet both of them have mused about how their approaches to the job have diverged starkly at times, leading to comparisons that have alternately flattered one and the other over the past three years. Throughout Bidens presidency, Obama has been careful to be almost universally positive about him, often casting private analysis of the administration in a sympathetic light with regular reminders that the presidency is complicated. Biden has always spoken fondly of Obama but has equally made no secret of his wish to avoid what he regards as some of Obamas biggest errors in office, including in his interactions with Congress and the military brass, especially over the war in Afghanistan. He has not always taken Obamas political advice either and has at times outright questioned Obamas judgment when it came to recent campaigns. (He has not forgotten Obamas past skepticism of his own presidential ambitions.) Though they still usually see eye-to-eye on big-picture political matters, they have not always kept in regular close touch during Bidens administration, sometimes leaving any coordination to their aides. Today, there is not much for Biden to consider about Obamas role beyond the specific ways his old boss might be most useful.

Campaigning for Georgia senator Raphael Warnock in Atlanta in2022. Photo: Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The moment is not as simple for Obama, who has been adamant about distancing himself from day-to-day politics for much of his post-presidency but who has nonetheless followed it closely and made clear to Biden that he will help when and how he thinks he can. Still, Obama has faced heat from both lefties critically reassessing his legacy and liberals who want to see more from him just as he has tried focusing on his own projects in philanthropy and media. This year, he is highly likely to reprise his role as one of Bidens most prominent surrogates come the fall. He has also gotten publicly involved earlier than many anticipated. Just this month, he joined Biden onstage in Los Angeles for his second splashy campaign fundraiser, this one featuring George Clooney, Julia Roberts, and Jimmy Kimmel. Between bashes like that and less glamorous efforts, the ex-president has already brought in more than $65 million for Biden, according to a Democrat familiar with the campaign numbers. He has filmed ten video clips that the Biden team has used as digital advertisements and more are likely to come. Both presidents are working out the exact contours of Obamas role in Bidens campaign, just as the relationship enters a new chapter defined by Trumps possible return and with it a threat to their joint legacy.

In 2019, Obama wasnt even sure that Biden should run at all, and he was initially unconvinced by the team around his former vice president. Even as Biden publicly embraced his old boss and many former Obama aides joined his orbit, more still went elsewhere in the early days of that cycle. Plouffe counseled Beto ORourke, and OMalley Dillon, Obamas former deputy campaign manager, moved to El Paso to manage the Texans campaign; others flocked to Pete Buttigieg, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, and Michael Bloomberg. Eventually, Obama came around to embracing Bidens campaign, helping him with some personal pre-debate encouragement and lightly nudging both Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar to drop out before Super Tuesday effectively cutting off Bernie Sanderss path to the nomination. Once Biden was the presumptive nominee in 2020, Obama stepped up his efforts, speaking directly with Sanders about how to bring the senator and his backers into the fold, such as joint policy task forces between the Biden and Sanders teams. (Sanders accepted the plan before Obama had even told Bidens aides about the idea.)

In the ensuing months, he spoke regularly with Biden, but even more with OMalley Dillon and fellow Obama veteran Anita Dunn, who were running the Biden campaign, asking about strategy and how Biden was taking their advice. At one point, Obama convinced them to quintuple their digital budget while he set up a working group of tech titans led in part by Eric Schmidt and Reid Hoffman to help bolster Bidens online operations. That summer, he convinced Steven Spielberg to assist in producing Bidens convention programming a role Spielberg is now reprising and during the event, which was mostly held via livestream thanks to COVID, Obama reemerged publicly as one of the campaigns top public advocates.

This years race has been a fundamentally different story from the start. Without having to scale a hobbling primary campaign into a national one amid a pandemic, and with the benefit of three years of incumbency, Biden and his aides saw little reason to rely on Obama so heavily again. Obama spoke occasionally to both the president and some of his top aides when they had questions or he was interested in hearing updates, but he mostly sat back and focused on his own foundation, giving paid speeches, and working as a producer. He was confident that the Democrats knew where to find him whenever they needed him. By late 2023, as the rematch between Biden and Trump became obvious, they came calling.

In private conversations with Biden advisers, Obama started offering some more thoughts on campaign mechanics, for one thing emphasizing the importance of building and maintaining robust staff in battleground states. At the December lunch which was first reported by the Washington Post he sought to remind Biden that in 2012, their campaign had an early and muscular ground game, including widespread field offices. (Since then, Biden has at times been fixated on field offices, visiting some in person and asking aides about progress in establishing more. At fundraisers, he has often updated donors on how many he has now opened compared to Trump.) As he has become more plugged in to Bidens political thinking, Obama speaks more often with OMalley Dillon the campaigns chair and functionally its executive including about Bidens efforts to target hard-to-persuade young and Black voters. At the same time, operatives in Obamas personal office coordinate with Bidens campaign to make sure Obama is in the loop on campaign updates. And he has kept in regular touch with the White House side, too, checking in with two more of his former top aides: chief of staff Jeff Zients and Dunn, a senior adviser.

All of this contact has largely quieted, if not erased, some of the once-common chatter about tensions between Obamas and Bidens networks (despite the frequent public assurances from everyone involved that they are part of one big political family). Some close to Obama were annoyed that more senior Biden aides didnt attend last falls Obamaworld reunion in Chicago celebrating 15 years since he first won the presidency. Meanwhile, Biden has at times joined some of his advisers in bristling at the punditry of Axelrod, who last year raised the question of whether the 81-year-old president should stay in the race, and they have not always seen eye-to-eye with Plouffe, either.

However, some Biden backers grumbled that they would have liked to hear more of a defense of Biden from Obama when talk mounted that Biden should quit. Similarly, Obama stayed away from the Biden camps behind-the-scenes efforts to assuage nervous donors and power players. (I would love if he was doing that, but were not rolling him out, one top Biden ally involved with that effort told me in the spring.) And he avoided directly joining Democratic efforts to address more immediate threats, such as No Labels, perhaps worried that the perception of his involvement could only hurt.

One of Obamas special concerns is the puzzle of breaking through to Gen-Z voters in a fractured media landscape. During the 2022 midterms, Obama met with a small group of TikTok influencers and filmed clips with them that reached upward of 31 million views. While in Los Angeles for this months fundraiser, he met with a larger group of more than 80 Instagram and TikTok creators whom he and the Biden campaign gathered in the hopes they would be especially influential with select important voter groups. We live in a cynical time. Lets face it, I think a lot of the people who watch you, listen to you, who are fans of you a lot of times they feel turned off by the political discourse. And I get it, he acknowledged, admitting that he usually watches sports coverage on TV, not political news. Recognizing that disengaged young voters are likelier to listen to these types of creators than more traditional sources of political information, he urged the group to use their influence on Bidens behalf, even if they disagreed with him on certain matters. Joe Bidens basic trajectory what he believes in his core about how you should treat other people and how we should be able to give opportunity for folks who dont have it, and how we should care for the planet, for the next generation he believes in the basic things that you believe in, Obama argued. Nine times out of ten, hes going to make decisions that accord with your core beliefs.

He evidently feels some responsibility to reach the youngest swath of voters. In March, Obama was seated between Bill Clinton and Biden during a fundraiser at Radio City Music Hall when the trio were interrupted by a young pro-Palestinian protester. Obama insisted on responding. I think people, understandably, oftentimes, want to feel a certain you know purity in terms of how those decisions are made, but a president doesnt have that luxury, he said. It is important for us to understand that it is possible for us to have moral clarity and have deeply held beliefs and still recognize that the world is complicated, and it is hard to solve these problems. Obama chose Biden to be his running mate, he added, because he has moral conviction and clarity, but he is also willing to acknowledge that the worlds complicated, and hes willing to listen to all sides in this debate, and every other debate, and try to see if we can find common ground. Biden looked on approvingly, clearly appreciating Obamas point.

Yet it is far from clear that this is the sort of help Biden will embrace when it comes to communicating to skeptical young voters. Some party strategists have quietly sided with the analysis offered by popular radio host Charlamagne Tha God in a widely shared New York Times interview earlier this spring. He just dont feel like hes of this moment. And maybe thats his own doing, he said of Obama. Dont get me wrong, hes one of the best speakers of all time. But I just dont know what he could say in this moment thats going to move people. After all, voters who turned 18 the last time Obama was on the ballot are 30 today; when it comes to young voters, some Democrats have weighed the pros and cons of relying more on figures who are more popular with them, like Sanders or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The most effective surrogates among disenchanted people overall might end up being celebrities who scan to average Americans as altogether nonpolitical.

To anyone watching closely, its been obvious that Obama has been thinking about where he fits in todays political mle and working on his public tone. When he joined Biden and Clinton in New York, the trio sat for a podcast interview in which Obama brought an I-cant-believe-this-stuff-really-needs-to-be-said intonation to his explanations of the complications of the presidency and global affairs. Onstage at Radio City, after catching up with Biden on Air Force One, he took on the role of chief cheerleader. He advocated that voters take a deep breath and consider the big picture. A few months later, onstage with Biden in L.A., he further honed some of the arguments his party colleagues were making about Trump.

Part of what happened over the last several years is weve normalized behavior that used to be disqualifying, he said. We had the spectacle of a nominee of one of the two major parties sitting in court and being convicted by a jury of his peers on 34 counts. You have his foundation is not allowed to operate because it was engaging in monkey business and not actually philanthropic work. You have his organization being prosecuted for not paying taxes. Even if you put aside Trumps daily outrages, Obama argued, it should be clear that Biden is the candidate standing for basic American values.

Thats likely to be a big part of his public message when he fully reemerges this fall. As one of the partys most popular figures for the last two decades, and still one of its strongest orators, he is almost certain to headline rallies again in September and October, having long ago come to the conclusion that he is most effective as a motivator when used sparingly and mostly once Election Day is in view.

Obama has felt most comfortable sticking to familiar themes, and though he has met with social-media influencers, he is also likely to appear in plenty of tried-and-true ads and behind lecterns on swing-state campuses. This Give it some time; its worked before is the likeliest and most effective rebuttal to takes like Charlamagnes. Obama hasnt shied from pointing out the extreme nature of Trumps candidacy or the outrageous circumstances surrounding it his invocation in Los Angeles of Trumps 34 felony convictions came days before Bidens campaign fully leaned into highlighting them itself. But he has also argued to Biden and his camp that one of their emphases should be in the contrast with Trump over health-care policy, especially protecting Obamas very popular signature Affordable Care Act.

Often these days, those who speak with Obama walk away with the clear impression that his fundamental view of politics, and of his ultimate political role, has only shifted so much even amid all of the past decades upheaval. He is as forceful as anyone in declaring this moments peril, but after years of seeming to question the deeper meaning of Trumps rise and possible return, Obama now comes across as having concluded that no radical rethink is necessary for his own conception of political progress or mass movements.

Early this month, the former president met behind closed doors with major donors to Democrats Senate-campaign committee in suburban Maryland just days after his mother-in-law, Marian Robinson, had died. He recounted her journey in, then out of, the segregated South Side of Chicago. I have to constantly remind my own daughters that this stuff has never been easy. We sometimes have a nostalgia, and we romanticize the past, he said, reflecting briefly on this political moments grave stakes before returning to a familiar argument. The struggles that were now in were the struggles that she experienced 50, 60, 70 years ago, he said of Robinson, and theyre the same struggles that America went through 100 years ago and 200 years ago. Those warring spirits in the American soul, they have been around a long time. And sometimes we move back a step before taking two steps forward. I have no doubt that we will do the same this time. So part of what I want to leave you with is a sense of hopefulness.

That day, one new survey showed Bidens approval rating 18 points underwater. A run of national polls had recently revealed the presidential race to be essentially tied a week after Trumps conviction. But Obama wanted the donors to remember that despite having been out of office for a while, I am still the hopey-changey guy.

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What Obama Is Whispering to Biden - New York Magazine

Michelle Obama, Frustrated with Biden Family, Is Notably Absent From President’s Campaign Trail – Washington Free Beacon

Michelle Obama is noticeably absent from President Joe Bidens reelection campaign. In private conversations, the former first lady expresses frustration over the Biden familys exile of her close friend and Hunter Bidens ex-wife, Kathleen Buhle, Axios reports.

Although her husband, former president Barack Obama, has supported President Bidens reelection bid on X, at fundraisers, and in campaign videos this year, Michelle Obama, a popular Democratic voice, has distanced herself from the campaign.

After Buhles divorce from Hunter Biden in 2017, Michellewho became close friends with Buhle during her husbands presidencyprivately told others that she felt the Biden family had wronged Buhle, anonymous sources close to the situation told Axios.

Buhle battled through Hunter's drug use and infidelity during their marriage. In the first son's recent trial, Hunters ex-girlfriendand brother Beau Bidens widowHallie Biden testified that her romantic relationship with Hunter began in late 2015 and early 2016when Buhle had said she and Hunter were not living together but still working on their marriage.

Although Barack Obama has been influential throughout Bidens presidency and reelection bid, the Obama-Biden relationship has been growing tense since 2015.

That year, then-vice president Biden was weighing a presidential run, and President Obama discouraged it, putting his support behind Hillary Clinton instead. It also was the year Biden's son Beau died of cancer, beginning years of unrest for the Biden family, including Hunter and Buhle's divorce, according to Axios.

Michelle has not entirely cut the Bidens out of her circle. Jill Biden "graciously" joined a memorial service for Michelle's mother on Monday, a source told Axios.

A spokesperson for Michelle Obama told Axios the former first lady supports Biden's reelection. "She is friends with Kathleen and with the Bidens. Two things can be true."

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Michelle Obama, Frustrated with Biden Family, Is Notably Absent From President's Campaign Trail - Washington Free Beacon

Obama’s Sister Gets Tear-Gassed in Live Interview During Kenya Protests – The Daily Beast

Barack Obamas half-sister was tear-gassed in the middle of a live interview with CNN amid protests in the Kenyan capital Tuesday.

Auma Obama, a Kenyan-British activist, showed up to support demonstrators taking part in nationwide protests against proposed tax hikes. Police opened fire with live ammunition and tear gas outside the parliament, with the chaos unfolding even as Obama tried to speak with CNN.

Im here because look at whats happening. Young Kenyans are demonstrating for their rights. They are demonstrating with flags and banners, she said. Moments later, she began coughing along with fellow demonstrators as tear gas enveloped the group.

I cant even see anymore, were being tear-gassed, she said.

Several bodies were seen by journalists outside the parliament after police opened fire, according to the Associated Press. A paramedic cited by Reuters said at least 10 demonstrators had been shot dead, though there was no immediate confirmation from police.

The unrest hit a fever pitch Tuesday as protesters stormed the parliament and legislators fled. Parts of the building were set ablaze before reportedly being put out by police water cannons.

Protesters have raged against a finance bill that would raise an extra $2.7 billion in taxes at a time when Kenyan citizens are already struggling.

They are budgeting for corruption, one protester told Reuters. We wont relent. Its the government that is going to back off. Not us.

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Obama's Sister Gets Tear-Gassed in Live Interview During Kenya Protests - The Daily Beast

Mayor Vows To Support South Shore Housing Protections Near Obama Center, But Is Light On Details – Block Club Chicago

WOODLAWN Mayor Brandon Johnson spoke enthusiastically about supporting South Shore residents in their fight against displacement during a housing summit this weekend.

However, the mayor shared few details on how hell throw his weight behind a set of housing protections proposed for the neighborhood, as supporters push to pass them before the Obama Presidential Center opens.

Several hundred people gathered Saturday for the second annual community benefits agreement summit at Hyde Park Academy High School, 6220 S. Stony Island Ave. in Woodlawn.

The summit was organized by members of the Obama CBA Coalition, who for nearly a decade have organized for anti-displacement policies in neighborhoods surrounding the Obama Center.

Summit attendees rallied in support of passing the South Shore Housing Preservation Ordinance, which has stalled for months in City Councils housing committee after being introduced in October. The ordinance would, among other points:

To read theordinance,click here. A one-page brief is availablehere.

Nearly90 percent of voters across nine 5th Ward precinctsnear the Obama Center site supported an anti-displacement ordinance in a non-binding referendum last February. A similar referendum in 2019 wasoverwhelmingly approved by votersin several 5th and 20th ward precincts.

The CBA Coalition has focused its efforts on South Shore since 2021, following a successful campaign which secured housing protections for Woodlawn in 2020.

The mayor repeatedly encouraged coalition members to grow their movement beyond the voices that are already convinced of the need for affordable housing and other protections, he said.

As much as there are real examples of harm that has been administered to our people by previous [mayoral] administrations, they did have some help from some of our people, Johnson said. Some of those individuals need to be organized.

This fight requires a far more robust, energetic [and] broader coalition, because what we do right for South Shore becomes the model for preventing displacement across the South and West sides, he said.

The Obama Center is expected to open in 2026. When asked whether he would commit to pushing the South Shore ordinance through council by 2025, Johnson took a long way of saying yes, he said. The mayor offered few details as he mostly repeated his points about winning over skeptics.

Of course Im down with the fight, but we need more hands swinging, Johnson said. My commitment to fighting alongside you has to be tethered to growing our fight.

During the summit, Johnson highlighted his push to expand a program offering free legal counsel to low-income Chicagoans in eviction court, which began in 2022 and is funded for three years using $8 million of federal COVID-19 relief.

The South Shore ordinance would create an Office of the Tenant Advocate that would similarly represent tenants in court and administrative cases at its discretion, among other functions. The office would start as a two-year pilot program in South Shore, then expand to a citywide office, according to the proposal.

The mayor also touted the South Shore Condo Preservation Pilot Program, a $15 million pilot program passed in 2022 to support residents of shared-ownership housing in South Shore.

Ald. Desmon Yancy (5th) introduced the South Shore Housing Preservation Ordinance in October with support from Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th), the latter of whom was crucial in passing the 2020 Woodlawn housing ordinance.

After several speeches from South Shore residents who shared their experiences of being priced out of the neighborhood in recent years, the alderpeople called on City Council to quickly pass the ordinance. The neighbors stories show how gentrification and displacement are already taking place while the Obama Center is built, they said.

Yancy echoed Johnsons points on the need for continued community work, as the mayors commitment is not enough to pass the ordinance, Yancy said. We need 26 [City Council] votes, he said.

The alderperson also referenced his alleged unprovoked assault by housing committee vice chair and fellow South Shore Ald. Greg Mitchell (7th) in February. The conflict was sparked by a disagreement over the ordinance proposal, which would affect 10 precincts in Mitchells ward, Yancy told the Sun-Times.

Frankly, there are Black aldermen who dont believe that we need affordable housing in our community, Yancy said Saturday. There are Black aldermen who dont believe that we need pathways to homeownership in our community. There are Black aldermen who dont believe that Black people should be in South Shore.

Yancy urged the council to pass the ordinance by September. If its not passed before budget season kicks into full gear, its a wrap for this year, he said.

The pressure is on now, Yancy said.

Coalition members vowed during the summit to continue their fight against displacement in South Shore and beyond. They asked supporters to attend upcoming council meetings and demand their alderpeople back the ordinance.

We wont stop until everyone is able to afford to stay, who wants to stay, until there are no more evictions by greedy landlords, [and] until our continued existence on the South Side right next to the Obama Center is a public right and no longer in danger, coalition member and Woodlawn resident Margaret Brewer said.

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Mayor Vows To Support South Shore Housing Protections Near Obama Center, But Is Light On Details - Block Club Chicago

Barack Obamas Sister, Auma Obama, Hit With Tear Gas During Live Interview Amid Protests In Kenya – imdb

Auma Obama, the half-sister of former President Barack Obama, was hit with tear gas during a live interview amid the protests in Nairobi, Kenya.

On June 25, CNN International correspondent Larry Madowo spoke with Auma during violent protests in Kenya, which included police firing live rounds and tear gas on protesters attempting to storm Parliament to protest legislation known as Finance Bill 2024.

The bill would raise an additional $2.7 billion in taxes at a time when many Kenyan citizens are struggling with poverty.

At least five people were killed in clashes with police, and dozens more had been injured.

Im here because look at whats happening, Auma told Madowo. Young Kenyans, who are demonstrating for their rights, theyre demonstrating with flags and banners.

I cant even see anymore! she added. Theyre being tear-gassed!

She started coughing along with the other activists around her while tear gas filled the air.

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Barack Obamas Sister, Auma Obama, Hit With Tear Gas During Live Interview Amid Protests In Kenya - imdb