Taranaki Daily News

Obama delivers farewell vision to fans

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UNITED STATES: US President Barack Obama blasted ‘‘zero-sum’’ politics as he drew a sharp contrast with his successor Donald Trump in his farewell address yesterday, acknowledg­ing that despite his historic election eight years ago, his vision for the country will exit the White House with him.

Obama’s speech in his home town of Chicago was a call for political engagement after a gruelling election won by Trump, who made undoing Obama’s achievemen­ts the centrepiec­e of his campaign.

The president made an appeal for the American people to embrace inclusiven­ess and to pre- serve his legacy before his Republican successor is inaugurate­d on January 20.

‘‘If every economic issue is framed as a struggle between a hard-working white middle class and undeservin­g minorities, then workers of all shades will be left fighting for scraps while the wealthy withdraw further into their private enclaves,’’ he said.

‘‘If we decline to invest in the children of immigrants, just because they don’t look like us, we diminish the prospects of our own children ... because those brown kids will represent a larger share of America’s workforce. ‘‘

The transition to Trump’s presidency loomed large over the address, and one senior administra­tion official familiar with the speech’s drafting said Obama recognised the conflictin­g emotions within the American electorate.

But Obama sought to present a vision of transcendi­ng politics, organised around the belief that his administra­tion - and the history of the US - demonstrat­es the power of engagement between citizens and the government.

‘‘Our democracy is threatened whenever we take it for granted,’’ he said. ‘‘All of us, regardless of party, should throw ourselves into the task of rebuilding our democratic institutio­ns.’’

The speech was one of Obama’s last opportunit­ies to make the case for policies, like the Affordable Care Act and Wall Street regulation, that Trump has vowed to repeal.

He appealed to American citizens to embrace tolerance, drawing an unspoken contrast with the president-elect, who has called for walling off the US border with Mexico and ending the admission of refugees from war-torn Muslim countries.

- TNS-Bloomberg

Two large bombs, one triggered by a suicide attacker, exploded near government offices in Kabul yesterday, killing at least 38 people and wounding dozens in the deadliest Taliban violence in Afghanista­n’s capital in months. In southern Afghanista­n, another attack at a guesthouse belonging to the governor of Kandahar province killed five people and wounded 12. An ambassador from the United Arab Emirates and other UAE diplomats were among the wounded, authoritie­s said. The suicide attack appeared to be the deadliest attack in Kabul since July, when two suicide bombers from a local affiliate of Islamic State struck a demonstrat­ion by a Shi’ite Muslim ethnic group, killing 80 people.

Hashtags, emojis and even a rubber duck may replace dogs, cats and hats in an upcoming version of the board game Monopoly. Manufactur­er Hasbro has begun a worldwide contest to let people choose the eight player tokens to be included in the next generation of the United States version of the game, based on the streets of Atlantic City, New Jersey. Voting runs until January 31, with the new version of the game due to go on sale in August.

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