Donald Trump’s jaw-dropping White House win is a slap in the face for Barack Obama, elected eight years ago as the country’s first black president on the promise of a nation united.
At
the political level, Hillary Clinton’s defeat is certainly a setback for Obama,
who campaigned hard for his former secretary of state, traveling across the
country and employing the charisma and charm that she sorely lacks. But, aside
from being the loss of a typical battle between the two major American
political parties, the 70-year-old real estate tycoon’s success is also a
stinging personal blow for Obama. It certainly appears that as if this ever
calm, cerebral and optimistic president failed to understand a large slice of
the American electorate and appreciate their reflexes, fears and concerns.
Indeed, it would seem Obama has failed to take the pulse of this other America,
a world of working class whites who felt they have been left in the lurch amid
rapid fire change from globalization and an increasingly multicultural society.
Over the short term, Obama, whose approval ratings remain high as he prepares
to leave office in January, might well ask what will even be left of his legacy
after a Trump administration. Trump has promised to scrap or overhaul many of
Obama’s signature initiatives, such as the health care plan that bears his
name, the battle against climate change and the Paris accord of 2015, and the
proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal. Obama has stated adamantly that
Trump, criticized as a loose gun on everything from foreign policy to his
treatment of women, is a danger to democracy. “We can’t afford the other guy.
Can’t do that! Can’t do that!” Obama said in Las Vegas a few days ago. –
Tolerance on the ballot – At the political and human levels, it is hard to
imagine two people more different than Obama and Trump. This means their world
view but also their views on women — Trump was accused during the campaign of
sexual misconduct — family, money and institutions, and even their style, the
way they speak and the words they use. Obama, the son of a Kenyan father and an
American mother, forged a path that led him to Harvard and Yale. Trump
inherited money from his family and developed a real estate empire centered on
hotels and casinos. He has boasted about paying as little as possible in taxes.
Obama is an intellectual who likes intricately reasoned discourse, at times to
a fault. Trump is a businessman who speaks his mind in blasts of short,
aggressive and sometimes vulgar phrases. “Democracy itself” is at stake in the
election, Obama said recently as he lashed out at Trump. “Civility is on the
ballot,” Obama added. “Tolerance is on the ballot. Courtesy is on the ballot.
Honesty is on the ballot. Equality is on the ballot. Kindness is on the
ballot.” Obama had personal reasons to try to stop Trump. In 2011, Trump was
not yet a candidate for the White House but had displayed a taste for the
limelight, controversy and conspiracy theories. For months, he fueled the
so-called “birther” movement that questioned whether Obama had been born on US
soil and was thus eligible to be president. An exasperated Obama called this
nonsense and held a press conference to show off his birth certificate. He was
born in Hawaii. A few days later, at the White House Correspondents Dinner,
attended by Trump, Obama cheerfully said what he thought of Trump. “No one is
happier, no one is prouder to put this birth certificate matter to rest than
the Donald,” Obama said. “And that’s because he can finally get back to
focusing on the issues that matter –- like, did we fake the moon landing?” Just
over five years later, Obama is getting ready to give up the White House to his
former foil.
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