Toronto Star

Obama’s sit-down with Prince Harry airs

Former president discusses internet, civilian life — but not Trump — in interview

- GREGORY KATZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— Former U.S. president Barack Obama told Prince Harry in an interview broadcast Wednesday that people in leadership roles must be careful in their use of social media and warned against spending too much time immersed in the internet at the expense of the world outside.

Obama did not, however, directly mention his successor, U.S. President Donald Trump, who has made the use of Twitter a centrepiec­e of his presidency.

“All of us in leadership have to find ways to recreate a common space on the internet,” he said. “One of the dangers of the internet is people can have entirely different realities. They can be just cocooned in informatio­n that reinforces their current biases.”

He spoke with Harry in Toronto in the prince’s capacity as guest editor of the BBC Radio 4 news program. Both men said the interview in September was Obama’s first since leaving the presidency in January.

Obama said he felt serene the day he left the White House at the end of his second four-year term, despite the vast amount of work that remained unfinished. He said it was “hugely liberating” to set his own agenda in the morning to have the time to talk with his wife, Michelle, now that he is no longer president.

“I miss the work itself because it was fascinatin­g,” Obama said of his eight years in the Oval Office, citing his health-care reforms as one of his proudest achievemen­ts.

In a brief live segment at the end of the show, Harry said he did not know if Obama would be on the guest list for his wedding in May to American actress Meghan Markle.

“I don’t know about that, we haven’t even put the invite or the guest list together, who knows if he’s going to be invited or not,” Harry said. “I wouldn’t want to ruin that surprise.”

The Sun newspaper, a popular tabloid, has suggested that the British government is concerned that Harry and Markle may invite the Obamas but not Trump, possibly straining ties between the two government­s.

Harry did say his fiancée enjoyed her first Christmas with the Royal Family.

“The family loved having her there,” Harry said.

The prince used his position to ask Obama a “lightning round” of questions of the type normally asked of entertaine­rs, not politician­s.

The former president declined to say whether he wears boxers or briefs, preserving a bit of postpresid­ential dignity, but was willing to say he prefers Aretha Franklin to Tina Turner — “Aretha is the best,” he said of the Queen of Soul — and favours retired basketball star Michael Jordan over current phenom LeBron James.

Obama rejected gloomy prognostic­ations about the state of the world, saying that in many ways the world is healthier and wealthier than it has ever been, making it perhaps the best time in human history to be born.

He cited improved treatment of Black Americans and greatly expanded opportunit­ies for young women as achievemen­ts of the past few generation­s that give him hope for the future.

 ?? KENSINGTON PALACE/THE OBAMA FOUNDATION/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Prince Harry’s BBC Radio 4 interview in Toronto with Barack Obama in September was the former U.S. president’s first since leaving office in January.
KENSINGTON PALACE/THE OBAMA FOUNDATION/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Prince Harry’s BBC Radio 4 interview in Toronto with Barack Obama in September was the former U.S. president’s first since leaving office in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada