Kuwait Times

Obama says ready to train new leaders in first speech

-

Former US president Barack Obama returned to the public spotlight yesterday, saying he hopes to spend the next phase of his life helping to “prepare the next generation of leadership”. After three months off, Obama broke his silence in his adopted hometown of Chicago, speaking to high school and college students about the need for greater civic engagement. The 55-yearold Democrat, who ended his two terms at the White House in January - handing power over to Donald Trump - said he was “incredibly optimistic” about the future, and that problems facing America could be solved.

“On the back end now of my presidency, now that it’s completed, I’m spending a lot of time thinking about what is the most important thing I can do for my next job?” Obama said in his opening remarks at the University of Chicago, where he once was a lecturer

at the law school. “What I’m convinced is that... the single most important thing I can do is to help in any way I can to prepare the next generation of leadership to take up the baton and to take their own crack at changing the world.”

Until yesterday, Donald Trump’s Democratic predecesso­r had not given a public speech or an interview since leaving the White House on Jan 20. He has tweeted a few times and issued a few statements through a spokesman, notably to defend his signature domestic policy achievemen­t, healthcare reform - which Trump’s Republican­s are now hoping to dismantle. Obama also spoke up when his billionair­e successor accused him of personally ordering the wiretappin­g of Trump Tower during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

But for now, he has abstained from any substantiv­e commentary on how Trump is doing, in keeping with presidenti­al protocol which dictates that past residents of the White House do not step on the toes of the current occupant. That silence comes in the face of accusation­s by Trump on everything from Syria, with the Republican all but accusing Obama of bearing responsibi­lity for chemical weapons attacks by the Damascus regime, to gang violence in America.

Youth civic engagement and community organizing are at the heart of the mission of the Obama Center, which is located on Chicago’s South Side, where Obama started his career as a community activist. On Sunday, America’s first black president privately met with at-risk youth from the South Side to discuss gang violence, jobs and training, according to The Chicago Tribune.

The Obamas are currently renting a house in Washington, where their youngest daughter Sasha is finishing high school. Since leaving office, Obama has gone kitesurfin­g in the Caribbean with British billionair­e Richard Branson. He then spent nearly a month in French Polynesia, where he vacationed on media mogul David Geffen’s yacht - and was reportedly working on his book.

But after yesterday, his public schedule will pick up pace. On May 7, he will receive the 2017 Profile in Courage award from the John F Kennedy Library Foundation in Boston. He will give a private paid speech during a visit to Italy. And then on May 25, he will deliver a speech at a Protestant church gathering at the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin, with Chancellor Angela Merkel at his side.

 ?? —AP ?? CHICAGO: Former US President Barack Obama smiles as he hosts a conversati­on on civic engagement and community organizing yesterday at the University of Chicago.
—AP CHICAGO: Former US President Barack Obama smiles as he hosts a conversati­on on civic engagement and community organizing yesterday at the University of Chicago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait