Khaleej Times

Prez Obama, it’s time for you to come back

We need your voice. There is not a saner, more trustworth­y opinion that many of us would rather hear

- Syndicate Caroline Randall Williams is the author of Lucy Negro, Redux and Soul Food Love.

President Obama, now is the time to start talking.

I appreciate the instinct to hold back, to follow the keep-quiet-about-the-newguy tradition of former presidents. But these are not traditiona­l times. They are unpreceden­ted, and frankly, unpresiden­tial.

You deserve a break, but we are out here in this handbasket. There has been a press secretary hiding among bushes, an FBI director who learned from television reports that he had been fired and Russians laughing in the Oval Office. Something called “the Mooch” happened for about 10 days, and back in May a man body slammed a reporter and then got elected to Congress.

Days ago, a tiki torch maker had to issue a serious political statement disavowing White supremacis­ts. Somehow this is happening in The New York

Times, not The Onion. All of which gives me the hopeful audacity to beg you once more unto the breach, to help unpack this madness.

You have held the highest office in the land for the maximum time it can be occupied. You are an expert on constituti­onal law and an embodiment of the ideals expounded by the so-called American dream.

Mr Obama, you are the president who got up and sang Amazing Grace after the Charleston, S.C., killings. You are the president who shed tears in public after Sandy Hook. Now we are a country troubled by the looming possibilit­y of a constituti­onal crisis, and hate groups are claiming the president as theirs. We need your voice. There is not a saner, more trustworth­y opinion that many of us would rather hear.

I recognise and respect your deliberate approach to navigating these fraught times, but this relentless subtlety has become wearisome. Mr Obama, now is not the time to follow the keep-quiet rules while the new administra­tion plays moral equivocato­r to a much aghast nation. It’s time for you to come back. I love that, after you posted on Twitter about the violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., you set a record for the mostliked tweet. But my joy at the news of your weighing in was complicate­d by your using a quotation, even one from Nelson Mandela. I looked to you for your good words. I’ll keep waiting because I know they will be worth it. But where are they?

In April, you spoke to students at the University of Chicago and identified your post-presidenti­al calling to help “prepare the next generation of leadership to take up the baton” as “the single most important thing I can do.” I entirely agree. But your distance remains a weight on my mind.

At first, and despite the seismic tonal shifts of early 2017, it was a joy to watch you on a deserved, extended holiday. Gelato. Kitesurfin­g. Taking pictures of natural-haired Michelle on a yacht. You were being carefree, and it was wonderful. Then came a deeper quiet. You came back, wore your collar open, signed a book deal. I was still happy for you, but there was an ache to it.

Don’t get me wrong — I’ve enjoyed your few public engagement­s so far this year. You spoke meaningful­ly on climate change in Milan. You eloquently repudiated the continuing attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act. It was heartening to see the people of Berlin receive you so warmly, and to watch you speak with Chancellor Angela Merkel. Mr Obama, you were, as ever, subtle, insightful and measured. But I know that you know that we can’t be hiding behind walls.

As a rule, I do not speak back to the television when I am alone. Or I didn’t used to. And then, around the time of James Comey’s firing, I listened to Alan Dershowitz basically announce that the apocalypse we’ve been dreading is upon us. I started to feel actual panic. I found myself yelling at the screen, and into the universe: “Barack! Where are you?”

By early August, this same phrase had turned into a bewildered mutter, as I listened to Representa­tive Maxine Waters tell Joe Scarboroug­h and Mika Brzezinski that she thinks we’re “nearing a constituti­onal crisis.” The fallout from Charlottes­ville has rendered my call to you a tired and heartbroke­n whisper.

As a Black Southern woman, I have grown accustomed to navigating a many-voiced universe. In the past months, however, I have felt keenly the absence of two voices: the collective sound of my sane Republican friends calling for inquiry and, more important, the voice of my president. Lately, the former crowd has begun to stir. Somehow, this has made the hope for your voice more urgent.

Are Dershowitz and Waters right about the jeopardy of our Constituti­on? Will hate groups continue to claim more space? Regarding the former, I refuse to believe that television testimony to Robert Mueller’s integrity is my only respite in all of this. And regarding the latter, it beggars belief that we must address this at all, but here we are. Some of us never trusted politics until you found your way to the top job. Coming to grips with any new administra­tion would have been hard, let alone this Kremlin-addled, Klan-endorsed turmoil we are being forced to watch.

Weeks ago, I was moved to tears (of relief) watching Senator John McCain give a thumbs-down on the Republican­s’ health care bill. In no world could I have imagined this. But then, I could not have imagined this world.

I made phone calls for you in 2008. I worked in Nashville’s Democratic headquarte­rs for much of the summer. I registered people to vote. I felt heard. In the intervenin­g years, your voice has been one of gravity, good sense and honesty. By 2009, my president was Black, and the House majority was blue.

My generation graduated from college, got our first jobs and became adults all under the auspices of that truth. We learned to experience politics through the lens of your eloquent presence in the White House. In this respect, you raised us. So we are unaccustom­ed to all of this wildness. Just because we’re grown doesn’t mean we don’t need to hear from the man who brought us up.

 ??  ?? Mr Obama, now is not the time to follow the keep-quiet rules while the new administra­tion plays moral equivocato­r to a much aghast nation
Mr Obama, now is not the time to follow the keep-quiet rules while the new administra­tion plays moral equivocato­r to a much aghast nation
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