Toronto Star

Trump campaign draws Obama from retirement

Ex-president’s instinct is to refrain from a brawl that may dent popularity

- GLENN THRUSH AND ELAINA PLOTT

Just after Donald Trump was elected president, Barack Obama slumped in his chair in the Oval Office and addressed an aide standing near a conspicuou­sly placed bowl of apples, emblem of a healthy-snacking policy soon to be swept aside, along with so much else.

“I am so done with all of this,” Obama said of his job, according to several people familiar with the exchange.

Yet he knew, even then, that a convention­al White House retirement was not an option. Obama, 55 at the time, was stuck holding a baton he had wanted to pass to Hillary Clinton, and saddled with a successor whose fixation on him, he believed, was rooted in a bizarre personal animus and the politics of racial backlash exemplifie­d by the birther lie.

“There is no model for my kind of post-presidency,” he told the aide. “I’m clearly renting space inside the guy’s head.”

Which is not to say that Obama was not committed to his pre-Trump retirement vision — a placid life that was to consist of writing, sun-flecked fairways, policy work through his foundation and family time aplenty at a new $11.7-million (U.S.) spread on Martha’s Vineyard.

Still, more than three years after his exit, the 44th president is back on a political battlefiel­d, drawn into the fight by an enemy, Trump, who is hellbent on erasing him, and by a friend, Joe Biden, who is equally intent on embracing him.

The stakes of that re-engagement were always going to be high. Obama is nothing if not protective of his legacy, especially in the face of Trump’s many attacks. Yet interviews with over 50 people in the former president’s orbit portray a conflicted combatant, trying to balance deep anger at his successor with an instinct to refrain from a brawl that he fears may dent his popularity and challenge his place in history.

That calculus, though, may be changing in the wake of George Floyd’s killing by police in Minneapoli­s. As the first Black U.S. president, Obama sees the current social and racial awakening as an opportunit­y to elevate a 2020 election dictated by Trump’s mud-wrestling style into something more meaningful — to channel a new, youthful movement toward a political aim, as he did in 2008.

He is doing so carefully, characteri­stically intent on keeping his cool, his reputation, his political capital and his dreams of a cosseted retirement intact.

“I don’t think he is hesitant,” said Dan Pfeiffer, a top adviser for more than a decade. “He has always been strategic about using his voice; it’s his most valuable commodity.”

Supporters have pressed him to be more aggressive.

“It would be nice, for a change, if Barack Obama could emerge from his cave and offer — no wait, DEMAND — a way forward,” columnist Drew Magary wrote in a much-shared Medium post in April titled “Where the Hell is Barack Obama?”

The counterarg­ument: He did his job and deserves to be left alone.

Obama’s head appears to be somewhere in the middle. He is still anguishing over the publicatio­n date of his long-awaited memoir. But last week he stepped up his nominally indirect criticism of Trump’s administra­tion — decrying a “shambolic, disorganiz­ed, mean-spirited approach to governance” during an online Biden fundraiser. And he made a pledge of sorts, telling Biden’s supporters: “Whatever you’ve done so far is not enough. And I hold myself and Michelle and our kids to that same standard.”

On Thursday, during an invitation-only Zoom fundraiser, Obama expressed outrage at the president’s use of “kung flu” and “China virus” to describe the coronaviru­s. “I don’t want a country in which the president of the United States is actively trying to promote anti-Asian sentiment and thinks it’s funny. I don’t want that. That still shocks and pisses me off,” Obama said, according to a transcript of his remarks provided by a participan­t in the event.

Obama speaks with the former vice-president and top campaign aides frequently, offering suggestion­s on staffing and messaging. Last month, he bluntly counselled Biden to keep his speeches brief, interviews crisp and slash the length of his tweets, the better to make the campaign a referendum on Trump and the economy, according to Democratic officials.

He has taken a particular interest in Biden’s work-in-progress digital operation, the officials said, enlisting powerful friends, like LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman and former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt, to share their expertise, they said.

Yet he continues to slow-walk requests, especially to headline more fundraiser­s. Some in Obama’s camp suggest he wants to avoid overshadow­ing the candidate — which Biden’s people are not buying. “By all means, overshadow us,” one of them joked. From the moment Trump was elected, Obama adopted a minimalist approach: He would critique his policy choices, not the man himself, following the norm of civility observed by his predecesso­rs.

But norms are not Trump’s thing. He made it clear from the start he wanted to eradicate any trace of Obama’s presence from the West Wing. The cancellati­on was more pronounced when it came to policy.

During the transition, one Trump aide got the idea of printing out the detailed checklist of Obama’s campaign promises from the official White House website to repurpose as a kind of hit list, according to two people familiar with the effort.

“This is personal for Trump; it is all about President Obama and demolishin­g his legacy. It’s his obsession,” said Omarosa Manigault Newman, an “Apprentice” veteran and, until her departure, one of the few Black officials in Trump’s West Wing. “President Obama will not be able to rest as long as Trump is breathing.”

It was telling how Obama talked about Trump during the 2018 midterm campaign: He referred to him less as a person than as a kind of epidemiolo­gical affliction on the body politic, spread by his Republican enablers.

“It did not start with Donald Trump — he is a symptom, not the cause,” he said at the University of Illinois in September 2018.

The U.S. political system, he added, was not “healthy” enough to form the “antibodies” to fight the contagion of “racial nationalis­m.”

The rising cries for racial justice have lent the 2020 campaign a coherence for Obama, a politician most comfortabl­e cloaking his criticism of an opponent in the language of movement politics.

Obama’s first reaction to the protests, people close to him said, was anxiety — that the spasms of rioting would spin out of control and play into Trump’s narrative of a lawless left.

But peaceful demonstrat­ors took control, igniting a national movement that challenged Trump without making him its focal point.

Soon after, in the middle of a strategy call with political aides and policy experts at his foundation, an excited Obama pronounced that “a tailor-made moment” had arrived.

His response to the Floyd killing was less about hammering Trump than about encouragin­g young people, who have been slow in embracing Biden, to vote. When he chose to speak publicly, it was to host an online forum highlighti­ng a slate of policing reforms that went nowhere in his second term.

In that sense, the role he is most comfortabl­e occupying is the job he was once so over.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Some say former U.S. president Barack Obama did his job and deserves to be left alone.
NAM Y. HUH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Some say former U.S. president Barack Obama did his job and deserves to be left alone.

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