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In his farewell, Obama lauds faith in change

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In his parting message to the nation, President Barack Obama declared his continued faith in the ability of all Americans to bring about powerful national change, despite the trials of the last eight years that so often stood between him and his goals.

Standing before thousands in his hometown of Chicago, Obama reflected on his origins as a community organizer who witnessed “the quiet dignity of working people in the face of struggle and loss” and argued that change was only possible “when ordinary people get involved” and join forces to demand progress.

“After eight years as your president, I still believe that,” Obama said. “And it’s not just my belief. It’s the beating heart of our American idea, our bold experiment in self-government.”

Now an elder statesman, Obama returned to the city that launched his unlikely political career to bring his eight years as president to a close. His speech at Chicago’s McCormick Place was his last chance to try to define what his presidency meant for America.

It was a fitting bookend to what he started in Chicago. It was here in 2008 that the nation’s first black president declared victory, and where over the years he tried to cultivate his brand of optimism in American politics.

In his speech, Obama invoked the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce’s teachings about equality and unalienabl­e rights, and its challenge to Americans to take it upon themselves to defend those rights and improve America’s democracy.

“This is the great gift our Founders gave us,” Obama said. “The freedom to chase our individual dreams through our sweat, toil, and imaginatio­n — and the imperative to strive together as well, to achieve a greater good.”

The president arrived in Chicago in the evening joined by an array of long-serving White House advisers and people from his past, including his sister Auma Obama from Kenya. First lady Michelle Obama, daughter Malia and family friends came along for what the White House said was Obama’s 445th mission aboard Air Force One.

Obama has said he is leaving his eight years in office still confident that the democratic system responds when dedicated citizens make their voices heard. The system did respond, in November, to Americans who by and large rejected Obama’s policies by electing Republican Donald Trump.

Obama and Democrats had warned against a Trump presidency in apocalypti­c terms. So Obama’s daunting task in the closing act of his political career was to explain how his vision of America remains relevant and achievable for Democrats in the Trump era.

No stranger to high-stakes speeches, Obama rose to national prominence on the power of his oratory. Determined not to simply recite a history of the last eight years, Obama directed his team to craft an address that would feel “bigger than politics” and speak to all Americans, including those who voted for Trump.

His chief speechwrit­er, Cody Keenan, started writing it last month while Obama was vacationin­g in Hawaii, handing him the first draft on the flight home. By late Monday Obama was immersed in a fourth draft, with Keenan staying at the White House all night to help polish Obama’s final message.

Ahead of his speech, Obama acknowledg­ed that while he leaves office with his work unfinished, he believes his administra­tion made the US “a stronger place for the generation­s that will follow ours.”

Seeking inspiratio­n, Obama’s speechwrit­ers spent weeks poring over his other momentous speeches, including his 2004 keynote at the Democratic National Convention and his 2008 speech after losing the New Hampshire primary to Hillary Clinton. They also revisited his 2015 address in Selma, Alabama, that both honored America’s exceptiona­lism and acknowledg­ed its painful history on civil rights.

Vice-President Joe Biden and his wife were also traveling to Chicago for the speech at McCormick Place, a sprawling convention center along Lake Michigan.

 ?? JOHN GRESS / REUTERS ?? US President Barack Obama acknowledg­es the crowd as he arrives to deliver his farewell address in Chicago, Illinois on Tuesday.
JOHN GRESS / REUTERS US President Barack Obama acknowledg­es the crowd as he arrives to deliver his farewell address in Chicago, Illinois on Tuesday.

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