Chicago Sun-Times

O BA MAIN CHICAGO MONDAY FOR 1 ST POST-PRESIDENTI­AL APPEARANCE

- BYLYNNSWEE­T Washington Bureau Chief Email: lsweet@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ lynnsweet

Former President Barack Obama will make his first postpresid­ential public appearance on Monday, heading to the University of Chicago to discuss civic engagement and community organizing.

Obama’s Chicago talk will be followed by other high- profile events in the coming weeks in the United States, Milan and Berlin, as he finally resurfaces in the public arena.

Obama’s 11 a. m. talk at the Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E. 60th, will be a “conversati­on,” as he is flanked by six younger activists — some from Kenwood Academy High School, some in college and some a little older than that, Obama spokesman Kevin Lewis told the Chicago Sun- Times.

The discussion, to be led by Obama, is part of the commitment the former president made to “engage the next generation of leaders,” Lewis said.

Whether there is much focus on President Donald Trump — or whether Obama engages at all on the president who is determined to undo his legacy achievemen­ts — remains to be seen.

Obama’s remarks will come days beforeApri­l 29, which iswhen Trump hits his 100- day mark in office. Obama also is resurfacin­g the same week that Trump may try again — after one failed attempt — to repeal Obama’s signature health care law, and as the Trump White House also seeks to unravel the Iran nuclear deal.

The Logan Center event will have an invitation- only audience, to include students selected from, according to Obama’s office: Harold Washington College; Malcolm X College; Kennedy King College; Columbia College; University of Chicago; Chicago State University; University of Illinois at Chicago; Roosevelt University; Northweste­rn University; DePaul University; Illinois Institute of Technology; and Loyola University.

Obama will arrive in Chicago Sunday and might also do other things while in the city for a few days; it will be just his second trip back to Chicago since leaving the White House on Jan. 20.

He delivered his farewell address Jan. 10 at McCormick Place.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel served as Obama’s first White House chief- of- staff and twice benefited from Obama’s endorsemen­ts.

Although Obama chose to live in Washington, D. C., until his youngest daughter, Sasha, graduates from high school, the mayor considers the Chicago speech yet another indication of howstrongl­y his former boss feels about the adopted hometown where his presidenti­al library will be built.

“I’m immensely proud that his last speech as president was here in the city of Chicago and his first major address in his post- presidency is here in the city of Chicago,” Emanuel said Friday.

“It reflects his emotional aswell as his intellectu­al commitment to this city and seeing this city as his home in that effort.”

Obama’s Monday appearance isn’t sponsored by his Obama Foundation, headquarte­red in university office space in Hyde Park. His first trip back to Chicago, on Feb. 15, was for meetings connected to his foundation.

The University of Chicago’s bid successful­ly landed the Obama Presidenti­al Center — a museum, library and event complex in Jackson Park, not far from the university and the Obama family’s Kenwood home.

Obama’s job as a community organizer on Chicago’s South Side put him on a path that led to the White House. The Obama Center, mapping out its programmin­g strategy, will likely include civic engagement and community organizing components.

Obama comes home as some community groups are organizing to secure a “community benefits” agreement from the Obama Foundation in connection with the constructi­on of the Obama Center. The foundation is opposed to communityb­enefit deals, arguing that the Obama Center — to cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build and endow— is intended to bolster the surroundin­g community.

Former first lady Michelle Obama is not expected to join Obama on this Chicago trip.

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Former President Barack Obama
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Former President Barack Obama

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