The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Nation needs to hear much more from Barack Obama

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Retirement has been good to Barack Obama.

The 44th president returned to the White House Tuesday for the first time since he left office. Fit and vigorous, if a bit grayer and more wrinkly, he noted that the return to 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave. meant “I have to wear a tie, which I very rarely do these days.”

Obama has been living his best life, even making a podcast and writing a book with Bruce Springstee­n. And though he retains “more than a passing interest in the course of our democracy,” he said, “I’m outside the arena.”

Therein lies the problem. President Obama: Your country needs you. Democracy is on the ropes. This is an all-hands-on-deck moment for the ship of state, and no one is better able to help the cause than Obama.

America desperatel­y needs Obama in the arena, though not necessaril­y in the Biden White House. The former president’s hour in the East Room brought back the memories of his oncein-a-generation talent, and inevitably invited comparison­s to his less charismati­c and much older successor.

Where Obama was loose, Biden was stiff. “Vice President Biden,” Obama began. Biden stepped forward and saluted. “That was a joke,” Obama felt the need to add. More jokes followed, in that Obama cadence, and a style that sounded extemporan­eous even though he was glancing at a teleprompt­er. Biden coughed, took out a hankie and discreetly blew his nose.

Obama wasn’t trying to steal the show. He credited Biden’s work on Obamacare, joked about Biden’s “BFD” remark (heard in that very room 12 years ago) and led the crowd in a long standing ovation for Biden.

“Feels like the good old days,” Biden said, beginning a speech that was, as usual, serviceabl­e, with the occasional struggle over a word, the squinting at the teleprompt­er, the puzzling aside, the stage whisper. The White House arranged for Biden to sign an executive order, but even there Biden played second fiddle to “the president,” as he still calls Obama.

After the signing, Obama worked the room with bear hugs and backslaps. “I’m going to go say hi to people — I’ll circle around,” he told the current president, who seemed more eager to leave. At one point, Biden appeared to reach for Obama’s arm but failed to get his attention.

Democrats shouldn’t delude themselves into thinking things would be better now if only Obama were in charge. For all his political skill, he was savaged in 2010 by demonizati­on, disinforma­tion and reflexive opposition similar to what Biden faces today. “There was a lot of misinforma­tion, to say the least,” Obama recalled Tuesday, adding with understate­ment that “it’s fair to say that most Republican­s showed little interest in working with us to get anything done.”

“Our Republican colleagues,” Biden concurred later, “haven’t changed a whole hell of a lot.”

Indeed, they’ve gotten worse. Republican­s are now taking aim at democracy itself, rejecting the results of an election, condoning a violent insurrecti­on in the Capitol (“legitimate political discourse”) and rolling back voting rights. “These partisan attempts at voter nullificat­ion are unlike anything we’ve seen in modern times, and they represent a profound threat to the basic democratic principle that all votes should be counted fairly and objectivel­y,” Obama himself wrote this year in concluding that “America’s long-standing grand experiment in democracy is being sorely tested.”

Obama hasn’t been entirely silent; he stumped in Virginia for Terry McAuliffe and spoke to House Democrats, for example. But as a celebrated former president, and the first Black president, he’s in an unrivaled position to mobilize Americans in defense of democracy. This is no time to be outside the arena.

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