San Francisco Chronicle

Obama steps up attacks against Trump at rally

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PHILADELPH­IA — President Obama hadn’t hit the campaign trail in a while. So he wanted to make sure Tuesday that voters remembered where he stood.

“I am really into electing Hillary Clinton,” Obama told a crowd at an outdoor rally in Philadelph­ia. “This is not me going through the motions here. I really, really, really want to elect Hillary Clinton.”

Obama’s day job has kept him busy, but he returned to the stump with vigor, alternatel­y making the case for his former secretary of state and repudiatin­g Republican nominee Donald Trump, often with biting sarcasm.

“This guy who spent 70 years on this Earth showing no concern for working people — this guy’s suddenly going to be your champion?” Obama asked.

In front of an enthusiast­ic crowd, the president previewed a role he will play with greater regularity in the campaign’s closing weeks as Clinton’s most high-profile advocate. Both the White House and Clinton’s campaign aim to use the power of the presidenti­al seal, Obama’s enhanced popularity and his credibilit­y with key segments of voters to preserve the presidency for Democrats, and much of his personal legacy in the process.

“Even though I have run my last campaign, I am going to work as hard as I can this fall to elect Hillary Clinton as our next president,” Obama said.

His return to the campaign trail couldn’t have come at a better time for her as she recuperate­s from pneumonia, which her campaign delayed in revealing, renewing widespread criticism about her level of transparen­cy.

Obama made a subtle reference to Clinton’s health, lauding her for the stamina she displayed on record-setting travel as his top diplomat. He focused more on her character and her readiness to assume the office.

“This is not the usual choice between parties and policies and left and right. This is more fundamenta­l,” Obama said. “This is a fundamenta­l choice about who we are as a people. This is a choice about the very meaning of America.”

A message of staying the course typically doesn’t help a party seeking a third consecutiv­e term in the White House. And second-term presidents have rarely been as active on the campaign trail as Obama intends to be this fall.

But a new Washington Post/ ABC News poll showed Obama enjoying his strongest poll numbers in years, with 58 percent of those surveyed saying they approved of his job performanc­e.

Obama also publicly voiced frustratio­n over news coverage of the race that he and many Democrats have expressed privately, agitating over what he sees as a false equivalenc­y between the liabilitie­s of two of the least-liked nominees in generation­s.

“Donald Trump says stuff every day that used to be considered as disqualify­ing for being president. Because he says it over and over again, the press just gives up,” he said. “We cannot afford to treat this like a reality show.”

 ?? Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images ?? President Obama arrives for a campaign rally for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton at Eakins Oval in Philadelph­ia.
Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images President Obama arrives for a campaign rally for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton at Eakins Oval in Philadelph­ia.

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