The Independent

Barack Obama says his next role will be to get young people active in politics

- EMILY SHUGERMAN

Former President Barack Obama has announced that his first post-presidenti­al project will be helping the next generation get active in politics.

Mr Obama made the announceme­nt at a panel hosted by the University of Chicago – his first public event since Donald Trump become President. “There’s a reason why I’m always optimistic, even when things

aren’t necessaril­y going the way I want, and that is because of young people like this,” Mr Obama said, gesturing to the young adults who joined him on the panel.

The former President said he considered working on numerous issues after leaving office, but chose to invest in the leadership of the next generation. He argued that too few Americans are active in politics currently, calling participat­ion in US election the “lowest voting rates of any developed democracy”.

Mr Obama attributed that disinteres­t to various issues, from the polarisati­on of political parties to the dominance of special interests. He realised, he said, that “the only folks who are going to be able to solve that are young people.”

The 55-year-old acknowledg­ed some issues that come with working with young people, including their increasing dependence on smart phones. Mr Obama said that he felt modern technology had brought about a more polarised media, and thus a more divided society. “If this generation is getting all their informatio­n through their phones, you don’t have to confront people who have different opinions, or different experience­s,” he said.

Despite this, Mr Obama said he was committed to creating new pathways for young people to get involved in politics. Yesterday’s panel, in which he engaged in a discussion with students from universiti­es around Chicago, looked to be one of the first steps in that plan.

The day before, the former President spoke at a roundtable discussion with young men from the Chicago Create Real Economic Destiny programme, a job skills program for at-risk youth. The location of both events was symbolic, as Mr Obama credits his past as a south side Chicago community organiser with inspiring his run for office. “The lessons that I learned here as an organisati­on stayed with me, and effectivel­y gave me the foundation for my subsequent political career,” Mr Obama said.

He even gave attendees tips for organising in their own communitie­s, urging them to “put down the clipboard and get to know [your community] a little”. Friends have reported that Mr Obama privately faults Hillary Clinton for her lack of in-person campaignin­g during the 2016 election.

Mr Obama has kept a low profile since the election, declining to comment publicly on his successor, Mr Trump. At his last press conference in January, Mr Obama said he would not be speaking out unless Mr Trump did something that threatened America’s “core values”.

Yesterday however, Mr Obama gave some advice that may have hit home for downtrodde­n members of the Democratic Party. “If you’re going to try something hard, there are going to be times when you screw up and you don’t succeed” Mr Obama told his young co-panellists. “And I think that the most important thing – and this is a little bit of a cliche, but sometimes cliches are true – is to learn from these failures, and have a sense of resilience.”

 ??  ?? The former President was speaking at a University of Chicago panel (AP/Charles Rex Arbogast)
The former President was speaking at a University of Chicago panel (AP/Charles Rex Arbogast)

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