The Borneo Post

Obama warns Trump, tells supporters ‘we’ll be okay’

-

I can tell you that — this is something I have told him — that this is a job of such magnitude that you can’t do it by yourself. You are enormously reliant on a team.

WASHINGTON: Barack Obama vowed to speak up i f Donald Trump threatens core US values and reassured Americans “we’ll be okay” Wednesday, in a political swansong after eight years as president.

Dur i ng hi s f i na l pr e s s conference and public appearance before Trump’s inaugurati­on on Friday, the 55-year- old said he was stepping back but would return to the political breach in extremis.

“I want to do some writing, I want to be quiet a little bit and not hear myself talk so darn much. I want to spend precious time with my girls,” he said.

But, he added, any ef fort to enforce systematic discrimina­tion, erode voting rights, muzzle the press or round up young immigrants, would cause him to speak out.

“There’s a difference between that normal functionin­g of politics and certain issues or certain moments where I think our core values may be at stake.”

During the campaign Trump vowed to ban Muslims from entering the United States and deport millions of illegal immigrants, many of them Latin Americans long- settled in the

Barack Obama, US president

country.

His strident tone since winning election and the contrast with eight years of Obama’s liberal agenda has given the country something akin to political whiplash.

Trump’s supporters are euphoric that political business as usual may be over, while his detractors are fearful of a mercurial and untested leader.

Against this backdrop, the traditiona­lly mild- mannered ritual of a final presidenti­al press conference was given added political weight.

Obama was in turn resolute and reassuring. “I have offered my best advice,” he said, describing his conversat ions with the president- elect.

“I can tell you that — this is something I have told him — that this is a job of such magnitude that you can’t do it by yourself. You are enormously reliant on a team.”

He also warned Trump to think through foreign policy decisions that may be domestical­ly popular, like his vow to move the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

“It’s a volatile environmen­t. What we have seen in the past is when some unilateral moves are made that speak to some of the core issues and sensitivit­ies of either side, that can be explosive.”

Asked about Trump’s stated intention to seek a thaw with the Kremlin, Obama stopped short of criticisin­g his successor — but noted that his own overtures to Russia were frustrated by an “adversaria­l spirit” when Vladimir Putin regained the presidency. — AFP

 ??  ?? US President Barack Obama holds his final news conference at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
US President Barack Obama holds his final news conference at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia