Los Angeles Times

Obama calls on voters to reject Trump

In break with tradition for former presidents, he returns to national stage to speak out against his successor.

- By Michael Finnegan and Eli Stokols

In a rare breach of tradition for former presidents, Barack Obama launched a scathing attack Friday on President Trump, framing the November election as a historic chance for Americans to reject his successor’s dark vision of the nation and restore honesty, decency and lawfulness to the U.S. government.

“If you thought elections don’t matter, I hope these last two years have corrected that impression,” Obama told students at the University of Illinois.

Obama attacked Trump by name, describing the incumbent and his Republican allies as defenders of the powerful and the privileged, stoking public anger and divisivene­ss as a means to protect themselves.

“It did not start with Donald Trump,” Obama said. “He is a symptom. Not the cause.”

Public fears of economic disruption and disorder around the globe, Obama said, have created conditions “ripe for exploitati­on by politician­s who have no compunctio­n and no shame about tapping into America’s dark history of racial and ethnic and religious division.”

The extraordin­ary speech, just over an hour long, captured the Democratic Party’s broader effort to define the midterm election as a referendum on Trump’s convulsive presidency.

Since leaving office, Obama has followed the pattern of ex-presidents keep-

ing relatively quiet about their successors. But Trump’s unpopulari­ty has opened a path for Democrats to seize control of the House, and Obama plans to play a leading role in their campaign to capture seats now held by Republican­s.

On Saturday in Anaheim, he is holding a rally for seven Democrats running in California’s most fiercely contested House races.

Obama’s return to the national stage is notable for a former president long accused by fellow Democrats of neglecting candidates for lower office during his White House tenure, allowing Republican­s to make sweeping gains in Congress and statehouse­s across the land.

“If you are really concerned about how the criminal justice system treats African Americans, the best way to protest is to vote — not just for senators and representa­tives, but for mayors and sheriffs and state legislator­s,” Obama said.

Trump, who arrived at a fundraisin­g luncheon in Fargo, N.D., roughly an hour after Obama concluded his remarks, sought to convey indifferen­ce to his predecesso­r’s speech.

“I watched it, but I fell asleep,” Trump said. “I’ve found he’s very good — very good for sleeping.”

In Illinois, where Obama was receiving the Paul H. Douglas Award for Ethics in Government at the university’s Urbana campus, the former president compared Trump to demagogues who promise simple solutions to complex problems and vow to clean up corruption while plundering away.

“Sound familiar?” he asked.

Obama mocked Trump’s equivocati­on in responding to the deadly violence that erupted last year in Charlottes­ville, Va., when neoNazi white supremacis­ts clashed with counter-protesters.

“How hard can that be, saying that Nazis are bad?” Obama asked.

Obama also castigated Trump for trying to curb the constituti­onal protection of the press.

“I complained plenty about Fox News,” he said. “But you never heard me threaten to shut them down or call them enemies of the people.”

Obama faulted Trump for “underminin­g our alliances” and “cozying up to the former head of the KGB,” Russian President Vladimir Putin.

As for the Republican­s who control both houses of Congress, Obama accused them of giving tax cuts to rich Americans who don’t need them, voting to take away healthcare from millions, making it harder for young people and minorities to vote, and rejecting the facts of climate change.

“It’s not conservati­ve,” he said. “It sure isn’t normal. It’s radical. It’s a vision that says the protection of our power and those who back us is all that matters, even when it hurts the country.”

Obama made a point to seek common ground with rural white Americans and others who have turned away from Democrats.

“I know there are evangelica­ls who are deeply committed to doing something about climate change,” he said. “I know there are conservati­ves who think there’s nothing compassion­ate about separating immigrant children from their mothers.”

Trump, by contrast, has stuck to a more polarizing strategy of trying to maximize turnout of his core supporters in November at the risk of alienating others.

At his rally Thursday night in Montana and again Friday in North Dakota, Trump continued to drive home wedge issues such as immigratio­n, contending that Democrats support “open borders” and high crime.

“Today’s Democrat Party is held hostage by haters, absolute haters, leftwing haters, angry mobs, deep-state radicals, and their fake-news allies,” Trump told the crowd in Billings, Mont.

Obama’s reemergenc­e as the face of his party carries risk for Democrats. Though he inspires millions of supporters, he also draws often intense hostility from conservati­ves, said Peter Hart, a veteran Democratic pollster.

“Turnout is driven by bringing enthusiasm and intensity to the base, and that’s what Obama has the ability to do,” Hart said. “He brings the passion and the voice that Democrats need to hear because he speaks in national terms, not just partisan terms. But he is still perceived as a partisan. Republican­s don’t like him.”

Indeed, Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio, the chairman of the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, said he has no doubt that Obama will galvanize conservati­ves.

“For three cycles, President Obama fired up Republican­s like nobody,” Stivers said, referring to the 2010, 2012 and 2014 elections. “I’m happy if he wants to do it again.”

In making his case against Trump, Obama assailed the president for what he described as political interferen­ce in corruption prosecutio­ns by the Justice Department.

“It should not be a partisan issue to say that we do not pressure the attorney general or the FBI to use the criminal justice system as a cudgel to punish our political opponents,” he said. “Or to explicitly call on the attorney general to protect members of our own party from prosecutio­n because an election happens to be coming up. I’m not making that up. That’s not hypothetic­al.”

Trump was annoyed when federal prosecutor­s last month announced indictment­s of the first two House members who backed him for president: Republican Reps. Chris Collins of New York and Duncan Hunter of San Diego County.

Collins was charged with insider trading, and Hunter and his wife were accused of using more than $250,000 in campaign donations to pay for personal expenses.

In North Dakota, Trump made a point of rebutting Obama’s reminder that the economic recovery began during his administra­tion.

After touting his own economic record and complainin­g about his portrayal in journalist Bob Woodward’s forthcomin­g book, Trump returned to the subject of Obama, asking the crowd: “Isn’t this more fun than listening to President Obama?”

‘It’s radical. It’s a vision that says the protection of our power and those who back us is all that matters, even when it hurts the country.’ — Former President Obama, criticizin­g GOP lawmakers

 ?? Sara Burnett Associated Press ?? FORMER President Obama makes a campaign stop in Urbana, Ill., on Friday with gubernator­ial candidate J.B. Pritzker, left, after delivering a fiery speech against President Trump at the University of Illinois.
Sara Burnett Associated Press FORMER President Obama makes a campaign stop in Urbana, Ill., on Friday with gubernator­ial candidate J.B. Pritzker, left, after delivering a fiery speech against President Trump at the University of Illinois.
 ?? Stephen Haas (Champaign–Urbana) News-Gazette ?? FORMER President Obama used his speech at the University of Illinois to define the midterms as a referendum on the Trump presidency.
Stephen Haas (Champaign–Urbana) News-Gazette FORMER President Obama used his speech at the University of Illinois to define the midterms as a referendum on the Trump presidency.

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